CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Kuwait emir warns critics as protest-hit parliament opens

Published: 17 Dec 2012 - 01:49 am | Last Updated: 05 Feb 2022 - 09:35 pm

KUWAIT city: Kuwait’s ruler opened a new parliament yesterday in the face of months of street protests and political unrest, saying he welcomed constructive criticism but would not accept lawless behaviour and chaos on the streets.

Security forces had set up barriers that stopped several hundred opposition activists - a small crowd by Kuwaiti standards - approaching the building overnight to continue their demonstrations against what they see as a rubber-stamp assembly.

The parliament in the US-allied, oil-producing Gulf state was elected on December 1 amid mass street rallies and an opposition boycott over a change to the voting laws that activists said favoured pro-government candidates. A long-running power struggle between members of Kuwait’s elected parliament and its appointed cabinet has held up reforms, stalled investment and sunk a series of assemblies.

The last opposition-dominated parliament was dissolved in June after just four months in power and this month’s election was the fifth since mid-2006. 

The Emir H H Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah told the new lawmakers yesterday that he supported freedom of expression and constructive criticism, but recent events had shown “aspects of chaos, breaching of the law and unguided political discourse”.

“Why have we flung the door open to allow the ill-intended and the sly to harm the security of our nation and its capabilities?” he asked in a frank public address.

He called on the new lawmakers to avoid “unfruitful debate”, to respect the boundaries of power and to cooperate with the government.

The most recent unrest erupted when the emir used emergency laws in October to cut the number of votes per citizen to one from four. He said it would fix a flawed system and ensure security.

Members of Kuwait’s disparate opposition said it would undermine their ability to encourage supporters to cast additional votes for allies and form political relationships in a country that does not allow political parties.

Kuwaiti authorities arrested three opposition activists yesterday, the father of one of them said. Khaled Al Deyain, Hamad Derbas and Anwar Al Fikr were detained outside the main court building, writer and activist Ahmed Al Deyain told journalists. He said he did not know why the three, members of the leftist Progressive Current opposition group, had been arrested. 

Kuwait has the most open political system in the Gulf Arab region with its 50-member National Assembly that has legislative powers and can question government ministers over policy.

But the Al Sabah family, which has ruled Kuwait for more than 250 years, holds important levers of power. The emir selects a prime minister who in turn forms a cabinet, with the top portfolios such as the interior, defence and foreign ministries held by ruling family members.

The new National Assembly includes 17 MPs from the country’s minority Shia community and three women. More than half of the lawmakers are newcomers to parliamentary politics. Prominent Shia MP Saleh Ashour said he would monitor the government’s work and give it six months to prove itself.

Reuters