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Arabia
Kuwaiti Prosecutors targets Opposition MPs
2011-11-28
KUWAIT CITY, Nov. 26: The Public Prosecution is requesting the National Assembly to lift the parliamentary immunity of eight lawmakers charged with storming the parliament on Nov. 16.

The official request is expected to reach the Legal and Legislative Committee this week against MPs Jamaan Al-Harbash, Faisal Al-Muslim, Musallam Al-Barrak, Falah Al-Sawwagh, Mubarak Al-Walaan, Waleed Al-Tabtabaei, Khaled Tahous and Mohammed Al-Mutair. The committee decision, however, must be approved by the assembly for it to pass.

Earlier last week, the legal committee approved the lifting of parliamentary immunity of MPs Al-Tabtabaei, Al-Harbash, Al-Muslim and Mohammed Hayef on charges of defamatory remarks against the prime minister.

The Opposition Bloc had warned "cabinet MPs" on Thursday against supporting the government to lift parliamentary immunity of a number of opposition MPs. The opposition claims the government plans to detain lawmakers before the no-confidence session against the HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Mohammad Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, and decrease the number of voters needed to remove him, which is 25.

The standoff between the government and the opposition resumes this week as opposition lawmakers and activists are staging a massive rally at Al-Erada Square on Monday to demand the release of activists and that the prime minister face his grilling on the multi-million deposit scandal.

Opposition MPs further claim that their lives are being threatened and have filed complaints requesting protection. MP Salem A-Namlaan filed a complaint at Al-Subahiya police station on Saturday as other opposition MPs announced the same.

The prosecution, meanwhile, continues to detain and interrogate 31 activists who are charged with 13 offenses, including breaking into the parliament on Nov. 16, assaulting security officers and theft of public funds. Supporters of the activists have stated that some of the detainees are on hunger-strike to protest the detention and alleged maltreatment.

Further arrests have been made in the case as around 47 suspects were on a warrant issued by the prosecution earlier last week. The detainees face prison sentences between 6 months to life, according to lawyers of the opposition defense team.

The Opposition Bloc insists that the parliament invaders were invited in to the premises by MPs to escape brutality by security forces and prevent further clashes. They claim that charges of damage to Abdullah Al-Salem Hall were fabricated by the National Assembly.

This Tuesday's parliament session is scheduled to discuss a grilling request by MPs Musallam Al-Barrak, Faisal Al-Muslim and Abdulrahman Al-Anjari against Sheikh Nasser Al-Sabah. The grilling is on the multimillion deposit scandal and the money transfers from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the premier's personal accounts.

The Opposition Bloc, of 20 lawmakers, accuses the PM of failing to take the appropriate measures to uncover the truth behind the multimillion deposit scam, in which 16 lawmakers - most of whom are supporters of the government, have been implicated. The MPs are alleged to have received $350 million in bribes to sell their votes on crucial issues.

The bloc further claims the prime minister has deliberately neglected calls for drafting a general policy on combating corruption, in addition to failure to personally monitor the activities of various ministries as stipulated in the Constitution.

The grilling also alleges that the PM ordered the transfer of millions of dollars from public funds into private accounts held by him abroad. The government adamantly denies all charges.

If the grilling is debated on Tuesday, the opposition seems to have the required votes (25) to oust the prime minister. Along with the 20-member Opposition Bloc, the 5-member National Action Bloc (NAB) has affirmed they will vote against Sheikh Nasser Al-Sabah. It is within the government's rights, however, to request the postponement of the grilling, refer it to the Legal and Legislative Committee or Constitutional Court to assert its legality.

The parliament break-in on Nov. 16 followed the removal of a grilling request against the PM off the agenda. The grilling was submitted by MPs Ahmed Al-Saadoun and Al-Anjari in the previous legislative round but was referred to the Constitutional Court, which ruled in October that the PM should not be questioned on violations committed by the ministers as he is in charge of the general policy of the state.

Meanwhile, the NAB plans to submit another grilling request against Sheikh Nasser Al-Sabah to question him on the government's refusal to form a committee comprised of MPs Hassan Jowhar and Adel Al-Sarawwy to investigate and examine the suspicious MPs' bank accounts and measures the Central Bank of Kuwait has taken in that regard. The request was rejected by the government and most of the pro-government MPs on Nov. 15.

Furthermore, the Opposition Bloc plans to grill the Minister of Interior, Sheikh Ahmad Al-Humoud Al-Sabah, on the detention of activists and abuse by security forces.
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Iraq
Mubarak Sparks Fury Over Iraq Comments
2006-04-10
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a major broker in Middle East politics, sparked Shiite fury across the region yesterday after suggesting that Iraq’s majority community was under the sway of Iran.
Only parts of it...
In an interview first aired Saturday by the Dubai-based Al-Arabiya news channel, Mubarak warned that Iraq was in the midst of a civil war that threatened the Middle East. He also expressed alarm about Shiite Iran’s influence in Arab countries. “There are Shiites in all these countries (of the region), significant percentages, and Shiites are mostly always loyal to Iran and not the countries where they live,” he said.
Kind of like Muslims in general, isn't it? You guys consider that a feature when it applies to us, a bug when it applies to you.
Ibrahim Jaafari, Iraq’s incumbent premier and a devout Shiite, unequivocally condemned Mubarak’s remarks. “The comments have upset Iraqi people who come from different religious and ethnic backgrounds and have astonished and discontented the Iraqi government,” he told reporters yesterday.
He's only stating a fact, like him or not. Iran owns and operates the al-Sadr mob, and they'd own and operate the Badr Brigades if the Hakim family would let them. The Hakims are merely more intelligent than Tater.
As Jaafari spoke, he was flanked by President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, and Adnan Al-Pachachi, a Sunni and the Parliament’s acting speaker.
... both of whom have to be polite for the sake of internal politix...
Jaafari’s government has come under repeated accusations of collusion with Tehran from Sunni Arab factions in Iraq. Egypt had been one of the main driving forces behind an attempt at uniting Iraqi ranks by sponsoring a national reconciliation conference, still due to take place in the near future.
But they're suspect because Egypt's a Sunni nation and their relations with Iran are none too warm...
Expressing his anguish at Mubarak’s statements, Talabani said these “accusations against our Shiite brothers are baseless and we have asked our foreign minister to talk to Egypt about this.” In nearby Kuwait, whose population is one third Shiite, Shiite MPs and clerics lashed out at Egypt’s veteran leader. “We are not begging for certificates of loyalty to our countries from Mubarak or others. These are irresponsible statements ... and only serve to incite sectarian rifts,” MP Hassan Jowhar said. “Nothing can satisfy Shiites except a clear, official apology from President Mubarak.”
Ummm... Does that mean they're going to riot and burn down the Egyptian embassy?
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Arabia
Extremist preachers under fire
2005-02-11
KUWAIT CITY: The Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs has no place for preachers who use the pulpit to promote radical and extremist ideas, the sector minister told a seminar Tuesday."The Awqaf Ministry rejects all forms of extremism and we have made it clear that those who promote extremist ideas from the pulpits have no place in the ministry," Dr Matouq Abdullah Al-Matouq told the seminar held under the slogan 'Together Against Terror' organized by MP Jamal Al-Omar at the Al-Omar Diwaniya in Adailiya.The gathering was also addressed by MPs Saleh Ashour, Hassan Jowhar, Ali Hmoud Al-Hajeri, Mohammed Khalifa and Issam Dabbous.
When you come right down to it, government has no place for a Ministry of Islamic Affairs, does it?
Minister of Social Affairs and Labor and Acting Minister of Information Faisal Al-Hajji also attended. Dr Matouq said extremism has nothing to do with Islam. "They (the extremists) call us 'Tagut' (idol worshippers) and say praying behind us or with us is tantamount to praying with idol worshippers, neither do they respect the sanctity of our mosques. Their leaders are the Internet. Their leaders are evil. Those who have no leaders have Satan as their leader."He said only 2 or 3 people among the extremists were found to have been employees of the ministry. The ministry, he said, dispensed with the services of Amer Khlaif Al-Enezi, the spiritual leader of the militants, when it became aware of his radical ideas.
Embarrassing, isn't it? But then, if there wasn't a Ministry of Islamic Affairs, you wouldn't have that problem. But it's tough to let people fend for themselves when it comes to religion...
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Arabia
Kuwaiti MPs Oppose ‘Americanizing Textbooks’
2003-12-31
Kuwaiti lawmakers warned the government yesterday against bowing to US and Western pressure to change school textbooks to omit references seen as promoting terror and extremism, and insisted they would not accept the “Americanization” of education.
Okay by me. Why not contract with the Japanese? They seem to write textbooks, retain their culture, and still manage not to go back to the wonderful world of jihad...
Islamist MPs in particular cautioned the government against changing “Islamic fundamentals” in text books, insisting the curricula do not encourage extremism or breed terrorists. “We warn the (education) minister and other officials against amending textbooks, especially (on) Islamic education” to remove subjects important to Muslims, Islamist MP Abdullah Okash told Parliament. “Do you have a new religion you want to teach students? Is it the Western religion? Is it the new American religion?” he asked.
I think it'd be a great idea if they learned something about other religions. It'd be even better if they were exposed to some solid agnostic philosophy.
The warning came during a debate on Kuwait’s education policy, which was opened Monday by the government when it informed Parliament it was modifying textbooks to promote tolerance and fight violence and extremism. “Our curricula will remain influenced by Islam and Arab nationalism. Those who don’t like this should leave the country,” Islamist MP Khaled Al-Adwah said. “We will not accept Americanization and Westernization of our school books. After all, Americans respect the people who respect themselves.”
That we do. We don't respect those who engage in mindless violence, though...
“I hope the government will not bow to external blackmail and threats... and be forced to delete important sections of Islamic education,” said Shiite MP Hassan Jowhar. Other MPs insisted that there should be no link between Islam and terrorism because terror is present worldwide.
It only wears a turban in most cases, not all...
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