Arab Times

To Whom It May Concern

- By Ahmed Al-Jarallah Editor-in-Chief, the Arab Times ahmedaljar­allah@gmail.com

OUR conditions continue to deteriorat­e as if we have been under a spell for the past three decades. State projects have either been halted, subjected to deliberate obstacles or have been a mine of corruption and waste.

The laws that are being enacted continue to tighten the rope on the neck of freedom, which the Kuwaiti society has been proud of for hundreds of years; while corruption continues to spread and no one is holding the negligent accountabl­e.

Is this the future we have been looking forward to since 1992, or have we gone wrong?

Indeed, there are delinquent­s, but who is holding them accountabl­e? Isn’t negligence the basis of corruption?

Some are negligent, but no one warns them. If an employee is punished, the influentia­l and the MPs lash out at the person behind such punishment or they take advantage of the incident to grill a minister. All this just because he wanted to rectify the situation; but more than that, the negligent becomes the boss and a stakeholde­r.

For years, people have been busy talking about the corrupt who either fled to where they could enjoy their loot or were acquitted because of loopholes in the submission­s and executive procedures.

In fact, this has become an outlet for drug dealers and criminals, so there have been many offensive comments about Kuwait in internatio­nal reports on corruption that is rampant in most of its institutio­ns, and about the money smuggled abroad or laundered at home, until its internatio­nal reputation has fallen to the bottom, but for how long? Prime ministers, ministers, undersecre­taries and MPs have been negligent and involved in sabotage; but they were not held accountabl­e.

In neighborin­g countries, there is no room for error. The official who is negligent is expelled immediatel­y and then held accountabl­e.

In Kuwait, the harshest step is to refer him to the door of retirement; only to return through the window of reward system with the rank of advisor and huge perks.

Currently, there is a wave of dismissals from positions. This is a good thing, but accountabi­lity is required; not only for those who infringed on public money and violated the law, but for all negligent people, no matter how high their heels are.

All this devastatio­n that Kuwait suffers from is the result of the actions of the group that did not find anyone to hold them accountabl­e.

I always try to highlight the positive aspects of societies and Gulf countries; which are similar to ours in terms of customs, traditions, culture, management and governance systems.

I assert that Kuwait is unique not just in the Gulf, but in the world as well. This is due to the fact that it operates on a free fall mode, as it is inconceiva­ble that a country continues to suffer from devastatio­n. Rather, you do not find anyone in charge of holding those who caused such suffering accountabl­e.

Look at the Arab countries that have been devastated by corruption; their institutio­ns were destroyed, while their people have fallen into the abyss of hunger and misery, because the one responsibl­e is not worried about being held accountabl­e and did not maintain honesty. Do you want us to reach this slope?

It is true that we are facing a new path, yet we have not noticed anything significan­t so far.

A strategy for building and advancemen­t is necessary, as well as action plans by the custodians of the homeland; so the full belly does not go and the empty belly does not come, while we remain in a vicious circle.

We need an authority with nails and teeth, prestige, courage, modern law and openness. Yes, openness; not a state that is closer to the ‘Taliban’ in everything, because everything we are experienci­ng does not represent Kuwait at all. Do I need to say more? Email: ahmed@aljarallah.com

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