Arabia |
Former Kuwait emir dies |
2008-05-14 |
![]() The already ailing Sheikh Saad succeeded to the throne in 2006 after the death of his predecessor, Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah. He was then deposed by parliament after only nine days on health grounds.Born in 1930, Sheikh Saad was the eldest son of the late Sheikh Abdullah al-Salem al-Sabah, the 11th emir of Kuwait, known as the father of independence and the constitution. He has one son, Fahd, and three surviving daughters. Two other daughters have died. |
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Kuwaiti emir appoints crown prince as prime minister | |
2006-02-08 | |
![]() The two men are from the Al-Jaber branch of the Al-Sabah ruling family, which by tradition has been alternating the leadership of the state with the Al-Salem branch for the past 85 years. The appointment follows a crisis of succession in Kuwait that saw ailing emir Sheikh Saad al-Abdallah al-Sabah voted out of office after only nine days in power following the death of his predecessor Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah on January 15. Sheikh Sabah was later nominated as new ruler and was confirmed by parliament on January 29. He was sworn in the same day.
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Cabinet Asks For Debate On Removing Emir | |||
2006-01-23 | |||
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Kuwaiti emir appeals for national unity |
2005-10-26 |
![]() The emir, 77, has not been seen public since he opened Parliament in October last year. In August, he returned home after more than two months in the United States where he underwent a minor surgery. His crown prince Sheikh Saad Abdullah al-Sabah, 75, has been undergoing medical treatment in Kuwait and abroad since colon surgery in 1997. The address made no reference to the succession crisis within the Al-Sabah family. The emir stepped in on October 10 and promised a "swift resolution" to the crisis after a leading family figure publicly criticized the government and proposed a three-member committee to assist the leadership. The dynasty's two main branches, which have been alternating the post of head of state for about 90 years, are locked in what the local press calls |
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Arabia |
Kuwaiti crown prince in hospital |
2005-06-10 |
Kuwaiti Crown Prince Sheikh Saad al-Abdullah al-Sabah has been admitted to hospital, official reports say. The agency said Sheikh Saad, who is in his 70s, has been suffering from a high level of blood glucose. The crown prince has been deputising for the Emir of Kuwait, Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah, who is in the US recovering from medical treatment. Many of the daily duties of the ruler are already handled by Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah. In 1997, Sheikh Saad spent seven months abroad for treatment and recuperation from colonic bleeding. He became crown prince in 1978, and was prime minister until July 2003, when the Emir appointed Sheik Sabah as prime minister, breaking with a political tradition that crown princes also serving as heads of government. Like the emir, Sheik Saad has made few public appearances in recent years. |
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Arabia |
Kuwait approves U.N. anti-terror financing treaty |
2005-02-07 |
Kuwait, cracking down on militants behind a surge in al Qaeda-linked violence, approved on Sunday a draft law for the oil-rich Gulf Arab state to formally join a U.N. treaty on curbing terror financing. "The Council of Ministers discussed a draft law to approve the State of Kuwait joining the international treaty to combat terror financing, and the council has decided to approve it," the cabinet said in a statement after its weekly meeting. The draft was referred to the ruler of the country, Emir Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah for approval, before it is moved to parliament for final ratification. A government official told Reuters the draft refers to an anti-terror financing resolution by the U.N. Security Council after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. The measure require U.N. member states to freeze the assets of any person or group suspected of ties to al Qaeda and orders governments to block suspects' movements and bar them from obtaining arms or funds, among other things. Tiny Kuwait recently tightened security nationwide following a number of clashes between police and militants believed linked to al Qaeda planning to launch anti-Western attacks there. Security forces are hunting down the militants since last month and rounded up Kuwaiti, Saudi and other Arab suspects. |
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Arabia |
Fresh hope for Islam's 'suffragettes' in Kuwait |
2004-10-17 |
While universal suffrage has been the norm in the West for decades, in the Middle East it remains a flashpoint between modernisers and Islamic fundamentalists. But women's rights in the region will receive a major boost later this month if Kuwait's parliament decides to grant females the vote, following in the footsteps of the other Gulf states, Bahrain and Qatar, which have already enfranchised women, although neither has yet elected a female member of parliament. The battle for the female franchise in Kuwait has been going on for decades. The emir, Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad al-Sabah, approved the move in 1999 only for parliament to turn it down by two votes after the stormiest debate in its history. Afterwards hundreds of men cheered in the streets. However, earlier this year Kuwait's Council of Ministers approved a draft bill to amend the 1962 constitution and give women both the right to vote and to stand for parliament. Women's campaigners say they are confident this time. "We will win, not with a landslide, but with enough votes," said Rola Dashti, one of the campaign leaders, who four years ago failed in [her bid] to secure the vote through court action. Haya Abdulrahman Al-Mughni, a Kuwaiti sociologist and author of Women in Kuwait: The Politics of Gender, backs the move, but doubts whether the result will be as radical as some are expecting. She said: "As the current legislation has provoked relatively little public opposition so far, its prospects appear more favourable." |
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Kuwait Approves Draft Law Giving Women the Vote | ||
2004-05-17 | ||
Kuwait's cabinet approved a draft law Sunday allowing women to vote and run in parliamentary polls, moving them a step closer to full political rights they have sought for decades in the conservative Gulf Arab state.
The government of Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, the emir's brother, has made clear it is committed to political and economic reforms in Kuwait, which has one-tenth of global oil reserves. U.S.-allied Kuwait says that pressing ahead with reforms is a top priority as the country promotes itself as a modern investor-friendly nation after the toppling in a U.S.-led war last year of former occupier and Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. Leading women's rights activist, Dr. Fatima al-Abdali, welcomed the news, adding that the issue of refusing women the vote was "sabotaging Kuwait's image internationally." Islamist and conservative MPs, who wield great influence in parliament, are opposed to Western influences and may prove to be a stumbling block in the face of the new draft. "I'm hopeful," Abdali said. "If this bill is serious and is not just a fight between the Islamist bloc and the democratic bloc, I think women can quickly gain everyone's confidence." Regarded by some as among the most emancipated in the conservative Muslim region, Kuwaiti women have had to sit back and watch their sisters in other Gulf states -- such as Qatar, Bahrain and Oman -- make modest progress. Kuwaiti women serve as diplomats, run businesses and help steer the vital oil industry in the country of 900,000 citizens. They constitute up to 70 percent of college graduates in Kuwait, but account for less than five percent of the country's decision makers. Some have moved up to mid-level public ranks, but none holds a top post such as government minister.
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