Hamad appoints 40 Shura members
Nine new faces in council; women make up 18.75 per cent of Bahrain’s parliament
Bahrain’s King Hamad Bin Eisa Al Khalifa has appointed 40 members, including a Jew and a Christian, to the Shura Council, the upper chamber of the bicameral parliament, keeping 31 names and introducing nine.
The appointments were made days following the quadrennial legislative elections to elect the 40 members of the Council of Representatives, the lower chamber.
Both chambers will convene on December 12 for the opening of the new parliamentary term during which King Hamad addresses the nation.
The appointments announced on Sunday evening kept Ali Saleh Al Saleh as the chairman of the Shura, a veteran politician who has headed the Shura since its second term in 2006. The first new format Shura Council was appointed in 2002 following the promulgation of the constitution that stipulated a bicameral parliament.
Jamal Fakhroo, another veteran figure who was the first deputy chairman in the outgoing Shura, and Jameela Salman, the second deputy chairwoman, were also reappointed. The first deputy in the outgoing Council of Representatives, Ali Al Aradi, who did not run in the legislative elections last month, was among the nine figures who were appointed.
“I look forward to the new responsibility and I ask God to assist me to rise up to the trust of HM the king and the people of Bahrain,” he said.
Three women, Ibtisam Al Dallal, a dentist, Mona Al Moayyad, the chairwoman of the Bahrain Businesswomen Society, and Sabeeka Al Fadhel replaced three other women, Zahwa Al Kawari, Samia Al Moayyad and Sawsan Taqawi, keeping the number of women in the Shura at nine.
The six men who left the Shura are Ahmad Bahzad, Jasem Al Mihzaa, Khalid Al Musallam, Saeed Abdullah, Dhiya Al Mousawi and Ali Eisa.
Hala Ramzi Fayez and Nancy Khedoury represent the Christian and Jewish components of the pluralistic Bahraini society.