The Free Press Journal

Kuwait PM, cabinet quit after disputes with parliament

- KUWAIT CITY

The Kuwaiti prime minister resigned on Thursday along with his cabinet, officials said, amid allegation­s of infighting between ministers and criticism of their performanc­e.

Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Mubarak Al-Sabah "submitted the resignatio­n of the cabinet to the emir... in order to allow for a cabinet reshuffle," government spokesman Tareq alMazrem said in a statement. Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al-Sabah accepted his resignatio­n, the official KUNA news agency reported.

Minister of Finance Nayef al-Hajraf resigned last month to avoid being questioned in parliament over violating Islamic law by charging interest on loans taken by retired Kuwaitis from the staterun pension agency.

And Public Works Minister Jenan Bushehri announced her resignatio­n following a lengthy grilling in parliament during which she came under fire for alleged mismanagem­ent of her portfolios and poor use of public funds.

On Tuesday, parliament also grilled Interior Minister Sheikh Khaled al-Jarrah Al-Sabah, a member of the ruling family, over similar accusation­s and MPs filed a no-confidence motion to oust him. Independen­t MP Saleh Ashour told AFP that as well as those criticisms, disputes between ministers over the current compositio­n of the cabinet had also triggered the resignatio­n.

Parliament speaker Marzouk al-Ghanem told reporters Thursday that "a large group of MPs believe that the problem lies in the government team because it is not homogenous".

He however ruled out the possibilit­y that parliament could be dissolved by the emir.

After accepting the resignatio­n, the emir can rename the outgoing premier or appoint a new head of government to form the cabinet, the eighth since 2011.

Kuwait is the only Gulf state with a fully elected parliament that enjoys wide legislativ­e powers and can vote ministers out of office.

The oil-rich country has been shaken by political disputes between lawmakers and the ruling familyled government for over a decade, with parliament and cabinets dissolved several times.

A demonstrat­ion held outside parliament last week over alleged rampant corruption was reminiscen­t of past crises that have marred political life in the country.

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