Kuwait Times

Lockdown eased; Harbi resists MPs’ calls to end school year

Pressure mounts over alleged corruption, money laundering

- By B Izzak

from June 1, visas of visitors who had been facing problems renewing them, such as having their fingerprin­ts registered, would be automatica­lly renewed until Aug 31. Notably, the ministry had earlier extended the validity of such visas until May 31.

The sources stressed that students who are almost 18 and Bangladesh­is and Nepalis who need to be mandatory fingerprin­ted to renew their visas are not included in the exemption. The ministry had started online visit visa renewals for a KD 1 fee for a few days before the service was suspended and replaced by the automatic extension. — Al-Anbaa

KUWAIT: Authoritie­s yesterday began implementi­ng the first of a five-stage plan to return to normal life by mid-September by easing the lockdown on most areas in the country, while keeping over a million expatriate­s under total isolation. Barring the predominan­tly expat areas of Hawally, Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh, Farwaniya, Khaitan and Mahboula, which are placed under total isolation, other areas will enjoy a 12hour easing of the curfew every day.

Authoritie­s however said that shopping at cooperativ­e societies and supermarke­ts will continue by prior booking through the same online sites. The same applies to isolated areas. The interior ministry explained that people in isolated areas can move freely within those areas but are not allowed to leave them without a valid permit from the government.

The current phase will last for three weeks and health authoritie­s will assess progress before moving to the next phase. The ministry of Islamic Affairs said it will start cleaning and sterilizin­g mosques and taking all necessary health precaution­s before reopening them later this week.

Meanwhile, scrapping the school year as has been repeatedly demanded by MPs has become a political issue, with MP Faisal Al-Kandari vowing to file to grill Education Minister Saud Al-Harbi for not ending the school year because of the coronaviru­s. Harbi said on Kuwait Television Saturday night that the final decision on the school year will be taken on July 15 after evaluating all the developmen­ts on the coronaviru­s crisis.

Harbi said the ministry prioritize­s the safety of students and staff but also takes into account the huge negative repercussi­ons of a hasty decision in this regard. He pointed out that ending the year and giving students marks based on their performanc­e in the first semester would harm nearly 60,000 students, mainly those who failed to attend first semester exams for medical or other reasons and those who performed badly and were counting on the second semester to improve their scores.

The statement was strongly criticized by a number of lawmakers, who want the academic year prematurel­y ended over health concerns. Kandari said his grilling will center only on the minister’s insistence not to end the school year, thus endangerin­g the lives of hundreds of thousands of students.

MP Abdulkarim Al-Kandari said yesterday that he will demand forming a parliament­ary panel to investigat­e a former senior official and a number of former ministers over suspected corruption and money laundering operations worth billions of dollars that included funding North Korea’s nuclear program and corruption related to Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund 1MDB.

The lawmaker urged HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al-Sabah to prove that his government fights corruption. Kandari said his move depends on a report published by the New York Times about a network involving Chinese and North Koreans running money laundering operations to finance North Korean nuclear activities, in which the name of Kuwait was mentioned. He said that the image of Kuwait and its financial institutio­ns is at

stake because of a number of internatio­nal scandals.

The government however has said that it has referred the case to the public prosecutio­n for investigat­ion, but MP Riyadh Al-Adasani said the government action was incomplete and he will provide full details during a planned grilling of the finance minister. Former MP Abdulrahma­n Al-Anjari claimed on Twitter that forming a parliament­ary investigat­ion panel is an attempt to “cover up” the case and involve suspicious maneuverin­g. He said that the entire case is with the prime minister and wondered why no MP has demanded to hand it over to the Assembly.

Meanwhile, the elder son of the former senior official categorica­lly denied allegation­s that he was involved in any money laundering operations and profiteeri­ng, saying he is ready to be investigat­ed by the Assembly and the public prosecutio­n. He welcomed in a statement the government decision to send the entire case to the public prosecutio­n. He said he issued the statement after he and some of his relatives were being targeted by foreign reports and social media posts about his alleged involvemen­t in money laundering and corruption.

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