Gulf News

In marathon session, Kuwait parliament debates grilling motion

Motion to grill oil minister was first to be debated. However, he was likely to survive

- BY HABIB TOUMI Bureau Chief

Kuwait’s parliament began one of the longest sessions in its history with its members starting a debate yesterday on the merits of three grilling motions filed against the prime minister, the social affairs and labour minister and the oil minister.

Speaker Marzouq Al Ganem said he anticipate­d the debates would run late into the night or until dawn today.

He told reporters at parliament that motions would be debated in the order they reached the parliament.

The motion to grill Oil Minister Bakheet Al Rasheed, filed by MPs Omar Al Tabtabai and Abdul Wahab Al Babteen, was to be debated first. The minister is facing 10 allegation­s of irregulari­ties. But latest indication­s were that the minister was likely to survive.

The motion to quiz Prime Minister Shaikh Jaber Al Mubarak Al Hamad Al Sabah, filed by MP Hamdan Al Azemi, was to follow. The Speaker said it could end by midnight.

On submitting the motion, the lawmaker said the quizzing would focus on Kuwait’s decline in the Corruption Perception­s Index (CPI), financial excesses, the government’s laxity in implementi­ng laws, the non-issuance of the executive regulation­s of some laws, the revocation of citizenshi­p, the status of the Bidoon (stateless people) and the continuati­on of the internatio­nal sports suspension.

The third motion, filed by MP Saleh Ashour against Minister of Social Affairs and Labour and State Minister for Economic Affairs, Hind Al Sabeeh, will be last on the agenda, and, according to Al Ganem, should be over by dawn or early morning today.

The motion was filed over allegation­s of the minister’s abuse of the law to dissolve non-government­al organisati­ons and cooperativ­e societies, failing to enforce necessary policies to restructur­e Kuwait’s demographi­cs and failing to apply developmen­t plans to bolster the national economy.

Last month, Al Ganem dismissed speculatio­n in Kuwait that the three motions could mean irreconcil­able difference­s between the parliament and the government, which would lead to the dissolutio­n of the parliament.

“I can clearly and confidentl­y say that the dissolutio­n of the parliament is an exclusive prerogativ­e of the Emir, and he is the one who appreciate­s its causes and timing,” he said. “But I can tell you, based on the informatio­n that I have as a Speaker that there are no excuses or reasons to dissolve the parliament.

“The allegation­s being made, whether based on good or bad intentions, about the dissolutio­n of the parliament, are not true. We will deal with the grilling motions within the constituti­onal frameworks. The session to debate the motions will logically extend from Tuesday morning until the dawn of Wednesday. Life goes on.”

Sessions rare

Marathon sessions to debate grilling motions in the Kuwaiti parliament are rare.

On November 27, 2013 the lawmakers reviewed four grilling motions against the prime minister, the health minister, the housing minister and the planning and developmen­t minister.

On June 24, 1986, four quizzing motions against the ministers of communicat­ion, finance, oil and education were on the agenda of the parliament. The parliament was dissolved on July 2, 1986.

 ??  ?? Bakheet Al Rasheed
Bakheet Al Rasheed

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