KUWAIT CITY —
Kuwait’s crown prince
announced Wednesday the dissolution of parliament and called for new elections
amid escalating disputes between the legislative assembly and cabinet.
اضافة اعلان
The move came as 21 opposition MPs have been on
strike for eight days in the parliament headquarters over the delaying of
legislative sessions and the failure to form a new government.
The cabinet, the fourth to be formed in two years,
resigned in April, three months after it was sworn in, but continued to act in
a caretaker capacity.
“It is in the nation’s interest that I seek the
dissolution of the National Assembly,” said Crown Prince Sheikh
Meshal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah in a televised address.
“I urge the Kuwaiti people to elect a new house that
can bear the great responsibility of maintaining state stability,” he continued
in the address given on behalf of Emir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah.
The 84-year-old emir had delegated some of his
constitutional responsibilities to the crown prince last year.
A royal decree on the dissolution of parliament will
be issued and a call for new elections will be made in the next few months,
Sheikh Meshal added, without specifying the exact date.
Oil-rich Kuwait has been shaken by disputes between
lawmakers and successive governments dominated by the ruling Sabah family for
more than a decade, with parliaments and cabinets dissolved several times.
Kuwait is the only
Gulf Arab state with a fully
elected parliament, which enjoys wide legislative powers and can vote ministers
out of office.
In February, the country’s interior and defense
ministers resigned in protest over the manner of parliamentary questioning of
other ministers.
Parliament had questioned Foreign Minister Sheikh
Ahmed Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah — a member of the royal family — over
corruption claims and alleged misuse of public funds.
The opposition and its allies won nearly half of
parliament’s 50 seats in the elections in 2020.
The polls were the first since Sheikh Nawaf took
power following the death of his half-brother,
Sheikh Sabah.
In recent years, there have been mounting calls for
reform in Kuwait, where expatriate residents make up 70 percent of the 4.8
million population.
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