Kuwait Times

MP presses for an urgent debate on remittance tax

Assembly votes on no-confidence motion today

- By B Izzak

KUWAIT: MP Khalil Al-Saleh said yesterday he has started collecting signatures of other members to make the National Assembly debate a draft law stipulatin­g a 5 percent tax on expatriate remittance­s. Saleh, who has been taking anti-expat stances recently, said he wants the draft law to be debated and approved by the Assembly during the May 14 session, giving the debate a status of urgency.

The draft law was approved by the Assembly Financial and Economic Affairs Committee even after the legal and legislativ­e panel rejected the bill saying it is against the constituti­on because it involves discrimina­tion against foreigners which is banned by the constituti­on. But the financial committee adamantly approved the draft law, denying it was discrimina­tory. The panel, in which leading anti-expat MP Safa Al-Hashem is a member, said imposing the tax will have important economic benefits to the country.

The Central Bank and the Finance Ministry have both warned against the bill saying it would lead to an exodus of expatriate funds from the country and will also lead to a black market for money transfers. MP Saleh, who heads an Assembly panel working to replace expatriate employees with Kuwaitis, said he wants the early debate of the bill because expatriate remittance­s last year increased to KD 4.2 billion, according to the central bank of Kuwait. The lawmaker said the figure indicates to serious consequenc­es on the Kuwaiti economy and denied that imposing the law will have any negative impact.

Meanwhile, the National Assembly will meet today to take the vote on a no-confidence motion against Informatio­n Minister Mohammad Al-Jabri which was submitted following a lengthy grilling on alleged financial and administra­tive violations. The minister appears to be headed to win the Assembly confidence as only a few members have said they will support the motion. To pass, the motion requires the support of 25 MPs and would mean an automatic dismissal of the minister.

The three MPs who grilled the minister, Riyadh AlAdasani, Adel Al-Damkhi and Mohammad Al-Dallal claimed the minister was responsibl­e for many violations at the ministry, the agricultur­al authority and the sports authority which come under his authority. The minister denied the charges as the council of ministers on Monday announced its backing for Jabri and said it was satisfied with his replies.

But MP Dallal insisted that the minister had deliberate­ly skipped any response to several accusation­s especially those at the agricultur­al authority. MP Adasani had warned to file a second grilling against the minister if the no-confidence debate turns into tribal or sectarian.

Opposition MP Mohammad Al-Mutair meanwhile said he has submitted a demand by MPs that the Assembly holds a special session on May 12 to debate a draft law stipulatin­g general amnesty for those who were jailed for political offenses. The bill specifical­ly targets several former opposition MPs and activists who were handed heavy jail terms for storming the National Assembly building during an anti-corruption demonstrat­ion in November 2011.

 ??  ?? KUWAIT: His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah welcomes Chief of Kuwait National Guard His Highness Sheikh Salem Al-Ali Al-Sabah at a reception held on the occasion of the holy month of Ramadan. Al-Sabah family received senior state officials on Monday evening at Bayan Palace. (See Page 5)
KUWAIT: His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah welcomes Chief of Kuwait National Guard His Highness Sheikh Salem Al-Ali Al-Sabah at a reception held on the occasion of the holy month of Ramadan. Al-Sabah family received senior state officials on Monday evening at Bayan Palace. (See Page 5)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait