Cecilia Sala, who travelled to Tehran on December 13 on a journalist's visa and was arrested six days later, told her family she had been sleeping on the floor in a cell with the lights permanently on
world1 hour ago
Performance was mixed, with some markets extending early losses and others clawing back some negative territory.
The Saudi stock market, the main Arab bourse, dived around eight percent at its opening but later recovered some of its losses.
The Tadawul All-Shares Index (TASI), which had rebounded 17.5 percent in the past two days, was trading down only 4.2 percent at 6,543.56 points.
Thirteen of 15 sectors dropped, with the leading petrochemicals and banks sectors shedding four percent and five percent, respectively.
Over the past two days, the Saudi market recovered more than 55 billion dollars of capitalisation and now stands at close to 360 billion dollars.
However, the TASI is still down 41 percent on the year.
Other Gulf market had wrapped up for the day.
The Kuwait Stock Exchange, the second largest in the Arab world, finished down 0.64 percent at 11,719.70 points, after opening about two percent lower.
It had bucked the trend in other Gulf markets and dropped in the past two days in reaction to modest nine-month profits by a number of major banks.
The Dubai Financial Market, which surged more than 22 percent over the past two days, extended early losses to closed down 7.44 percent at 3,427.87.
Market leader, real estate developer Emaar, sank almost 10 percent, with the real estate sector down 9.85 percent.
The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, which also gained 15 percent over two days, also went from bad to worse, dropping 2.13 percent to close at 3,525.82.
The key real estate sector slumped 4.1 percent.
The tiny Muscat Securities market shed just 0.03 percent, while the Bahrain Stock Exchange was down down one percent.
The Doha Securities Market finished trading 3.3 percent lower at 8,098.95 points.
‘What happened today is a clear indication that the Gulf stocks are still affected by panic from the global crisis,’ said Walid Mohamed, financial analysts at Kuwait's Global Investment House.
‘It is an indication that investor confidence has not been fully restored and it may take some time to recover. Investors are taking a wait-and-see attitude.’
Governments in the oil-rich region have taken steps to support their financial systems after stock markets sustained huge losses last week.
On Tuesday, the UAE made 19 billion dollars available to local banks, bringing to 32 billion dollars the total pledged since the beginning of the crisis.
On Sunday, it had guaranteed deposits and savings at banks operating in the country, as well as interbank lending.
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain have slashed interest rates, pledged tens of billions of dollars of liquidity to domestic banks and eased lending restrictions.
Qatar also decided to buy between 10 percent and 20 percent of bank shares.
In Egypt, where trading was still underway, the CASE-30 stock index was down 2.80 percent to 5,966.07 in mid-afternoon business after dipping 3.15 percent at the open.
The key index had lost more than 20 percent of its value last week amid widespread global selling last week. Monday and Tuesday saw strong gains, as elsewhere in the region.
The most heavily traded stock, Orascom Construction Industries, fell 2.75 percent, while major investment bank EFG-Hermes shares were down 2.55 percent.
The index had lost more than half its value in six months since hitting a high of 12,000 points in May.
Cecilia Sala, who travelled to Tehran on December 13 on a journalist's visa and was arrested six days later, told her family she had been sleeping on the floor in a cell with the lights permanently on
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