More than 3,000 Kuwaitis demand election of PM from outside Al-Sabah family in rally held in Kuwaiti capital.
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Middle East Online
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KUWAIT
CITY - More than 3,000 Kuwaitis rallied in front of the parliament
Monday demanding the election of a prime minister from outside the
ruling Al-Sabah family and against a government move to amend the
electoral law.
Among them were 21 lawmakers from the
opposition-majority parliament which was elected in February before
being dissolved months later after the constitutional court declared the
polls illegal and reinstated the previous pro-government parliament.
"We
have decided as people that (Prime Minister) Jaber al-Mubarak will be
the last prime minister... from the Al-Sabah" family, prominent Islamist
MP Walid al-Tabtabaie told the rally.
The Al-Sabah
family can "be the emirs but the ministers will be from among us," he
said at the so-called "Determination Square" located opposite the
parliament.
Kuwait was the first Arab state in the Gulf
to introduce democracy 50 years ago but the constitution leaves massive
powers in the hands of the ruler and the government is dominated by the
Al-Sabah dynasty that has ruled the country for over 250 years without
any challenge.
Since 2006, the government resigned nine times and parliament was dissolved on five occasions.
"Our
problem is with the members of the family who must be kept away from
ministerial positions. There must be a law that organises the work of
the ruling family," said former MP Khaled Shakheer.
"I will come every evening to the Determination Square with the people until our demands are met," he told the demonstrators.
The
rally was called for by Nahj -- an umbrella group of Islamist and
independent opposition and youth activists who have called for
activating the constitutional monarchy concept in Kuwait.
An AFP correspondent reported tight security measures in the square and the areas surrounding it.
Hundreds
of opposition activists insisted on remaining in the square even after
the demonstration was over despite a ban by the interior ministry on any
sit-ins.
The demonstrators are also protesting against a government move to amend the electoral law.
Earlier
this month the government decided to refer the electoral law, amended
in its current form in 2006, to the constitutional court over suspicion
that it contradicts the constitution.
The move will
effectively put on hold dissolving the pro-government parliament,
reinstated in a court ruling on June 20 after it was dismissed in
December, and holding fresh general election.
A similar rally took place last week against the move, described by the opposition as a coup against the constitutional system.
Opposition
activists said on Monday that they will continue their protests until
the constitutional court announces its final decision on amending the
electoral law later this month.
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Wednesday, 12 September 2012
Opposition-led Kuwaitis up ante on ruling family
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