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Kuwait formally dissolves parliament, delays budget approval until after elections

A view shows the first parliament session held after elections, in Kuwait City, Kuwait December 15, 2020. REUTERS/Stephanie McGehee/File Photo

KUWAIT, Aug 2 (Reuters) – Kuwait formally dissolved parliament in a decree issued on Tuesday, state news agency KUNA said, as the Gulf Arab state’s crown prince moved to resolve a standoff between the government and elected parliament that has hindered fiscal reform.
Reporting by Ahmed Hagagy in Kuwait, Yomna Ehab and Nayera Abdallah in Cairo; Writing by Lina Najem and Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by Christina Fincher and Tomasz Janowski

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Kuwait’s parliament dissolved by decree of emir

The dissolution of the government is common in Kuwaiti politics, where the emir is entitled to dissolve the National Assembly as long as he provides a reason.

By DEBBIE MOHNBLATT/THE MEDIA LINE

Kuwait’s newly appointed crown prince Sheikh Meshal al-Ahmad Al-Jaber al-Sabah waves before he is sworn in, at the parliament, in Kuwait City, Kuwait, October 8, 2020.
(photo credit: REUTERS/STEPHANIE MCGEHEE)

Kuwaiti Crown Prince Sheikh Meshal Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah dissolved the country’s parliament by an Emiri Decree issued on Tuesday, several hours after the county’s new cabinet was sworn in.

The decree said that the government was dissolved in order “to rectify the political scene, the lack of harmony and cooperation … and behavior that undermines national unity, it was necessary to resort to the people…to rectify the path,” according to the Kuwait News Agency (KUNA).

Mohammad Alwahaib, of the Philosophy Department at Kuwait University, told The Media Line that the dissolution of the parliament is not an unusual occurrence in his country.

“This is a common case for Kuwaiti politics. There is no parliament in the last 50 years that completed its constitutional period, which is four years,” he said.
He noted that the only difference this time is the fact that this is the first dissolution of the parliament under the current Emir of Kuwait, Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Saba, and the authorities that he gave to the crown prince.

A view shows the first parliament session held after elections, in Kuwait City, Kuwait, December 15, 2020. (credit: REUTERS/STEPHANIE MCGEHEE/FILE PHOTO)

Democracy in Kuwait
Kuwait, which has 4 million inhabitants of which only 1 million are citizens, is a semi-democratic country with a hybrid political system that is made up of a popularly elected parliament, and a government appointed by the country’s emir. Kuwait is considered the most democratic Gulf country because it has the highest degree of constitutionalism.

However, the emir of Kuwait has a great deal of power when it comes to elections and government formation, George Emile Irani, an adjunct professor at the Universidad Alfonzo El Sabio in Madrid who until 2021 was an associate professor at the American University of Kuwait, told The Media Line.

Alwahaib explains that, according to Kuwait’s constitution, the emir is entitled to dissolve the country’s parliament, the National Assembly, as long as he provides a reason for the dissolution.

The constitution also imposes a limitation, Alwahaib added, which is that the emir cannot dissolve the parliament for the same reason twice.

After a National Assembly is dissolved, a new round of elections must be held in the country within two months, otherwise the dissolution is annulled and the National Assembly reinstated to its position.

This means that Kuwait must hold a new round of elections before October 2 of this year for the dissolution to be valid.

The last time the Kuwaiti parliament was dissolved occurred in 2016. Usually, the main reason for the dissolution of the government is when the country finds itself in a political deadlock between the parliament and the government, which puts a halt to reforms and investments in the country.

Alwahaib says that this time, one of the reasons for the deadlock involves a dispute between the opposition in parliament and the government, where the opposition openly backed Bader Al-Humaidi to become the speaker of the parliament while the government, which can also vote in the parliament, backed Marzouq Ali Mohammed Al-Ghanim.

Another factor, noted Alwahaib, is the inability of the former prime minister, Sabah Al Khalid Al Sabah, to pass a budget for 2022.

Later, when the parliament was about to vote for a non-cooperation motion that could end his career, “the prime minister decided not to enter the session of parliament that was appointed to vote. Probably because he knew that he couldn’t get the votes even from those who are pro-government,” Alwahaib said.

The head of the parliament decided not to hold sessions without the presence of the government. This is part of a constitutionally disputable but long-standing tradition that when the government is not present, the parliament is not in session. From this arose big questions regarding the actual democracy in Kuwait, he noted.

Alwahaib added that all of this happened in the aftermath of some large corruption scandals, in which many senior officials in the government and the army were accused.

Stability
“People of Kuwait appreciate that things are being more stable now, but basically for them, Kuwait is fine as long as they can get their subsidies every month and their salaries.”
George Emile Irani, Universidad Alfonzo El Sabio in Madrid

Irani noted that the dissolution of the parliament will not really affect the stability of the Arab Gulf country.

“It won’t have any impact on the stability of the country because Kuwait is a very rich country that has a lot of resources,” he said. “People of Kuwait appreciate that things are being more stable now, but basically for them, Kuwait is fine as long as they can get their subsidies every month and their salaries.”

“They’ll form a new government and then things will go on,” he said.

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Influential Shiite cleric whose followers stormed Iraqi parliament says protest will continue, calls for early elections

Influential Shiite cleric whose followers stormed Iraqi parliament says protest will continue, calls for early elections

ByThe Associated Press

August 03, 2022, 10:16 AM

BAGHDAD — Influential Shiite cleric whose followers stormed Iraqi parliament says protest will continue, calls for early elections.

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Iraqi cleric calls for dissolution of parliament, early vote

By Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Samya Kullab | AP

August 3, 2022 at 3:17 p.m. EDT

Followers of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr set up tents during outside the Iraqi Parliament,, during a sit-in protest, in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2022. The Influential Shiite cleric has told his followers to continue their sit-in inside Iraq’s government zone, and called for the dissolution of the parliament and early elections. (AP Photo/Anmar Khalil)

 

BAGHDAD — Influential Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr told followers Wednesday to continue their sit-in inside Iraq’s government zone, and called for the dissolution of parliament and early elections, signaling a deepening power struggle with his rivals.

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Speaking for the first time since thousands of his followers stormed the parliament building in Baghdad on Saturday, al-Sadr said the “revolutionaries” must stay and continue their sit-in. He dismissed the option of engaging in dialogue with his political opponents in the Coordination Framework, an alliance of mostly Iran-backed parties, saying they did not bear fruit in the past.

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Iraq: Shia leader Muktada al-Sadr calls for dissolution of parliament and elections

August 3, 2022 – News84media.com 

By

Published on : 08/04/2022 – 00:05
 

In a televised address, Shia leader Muktada al-Sadr called for the dissolution of the Iraqi parliament and early legislative elections. While the country is crippled by political disputes, he felt “not interested” in talks with his opponents.

In a context of total political paralysis, powerful Shia leader Muktada al-Sadr, in a televised speech, on Wednesday 3 August, called for the dissolution of the Iraqi parliament as well as early legislative elections.
According to the Iraqi constitution, parliament can only be dissolved by an absolute majority. It may be requested by a third of the deputies, or by the Prime Minister with the agreement of the President of the Republic.
Tensions escalated in Iraq when Muktada al-Sadr’s prime ministerial candidate was rejected by her opponents, the pro-Iranian Shi’ite factions that form an influential coordination framework.
“I am sure that the majority of the population is completely outraged by the ruling class, including some (politicians) related to my present,” the Shia leader admitted in his speech broadcast on local television on Wednesday evening. “From now on, there will be no more former figures, regardless of their affiliation”, he assured, proposing “a peaceful revolutionary democratic process, then early democratic elections after the dissolution of the current parliament”.
It is the first public statement from the troublemaker in Iraqi political life as his supporters stormed the parliament seat on Saturday in thousands to strike.
In search of head of government
The Sadrist Current won the last legislative election of October 2021, in which 73 were elected to a parliament of 329 deputies.
But in June, Muktada al-Sadr surprised his representatives by resigning, failing to appoint a prime minister and form a “majority” government with his allies.
Following this resignation, opponents of the coordination framework became the main Shia bloc within Hemicycle. The coalition includes a former paramilitary of Hachad al-Chabi and historical foe of Muqtada al-Sadr, the party of former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki. In late July, he submitted his candidacy for the post of prime minister to Mohamed Chia al-Soudani, a 52-year-old former minister and former provincial governor.
Nearly ten months of negotiations and political skirmishes between the parties have not allowed Iraq to appoint a new president or head of government of the republic.
Muktada al-Sadr launched a campaign of maximum pressure against his opponents, and demonstrated that he was still able to mobilize the crowd to advance his pawn: twice his supporters attacked parliament in late July. did, set up a camp.
He insisted, “Revolutionaries and protesters should join the dharna and continue their camp till the demands are implemented.”
call for frequent conversations
The Shia leader’s speech comes at a time when there is a growing demand for dialogue on the political scene.
“Serious dialogues that can give hope to resolve disputes (…) begin with respect to constitutional institutions”, a brief tweet in reference to the parliament’s capture on Wednesday evening launched in Nouri al-Maliki. Because in an effort to find a way out of the crisis, Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, who handles current affairs, recently proposed a “national dialogue”.
The United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) also called for “meaningful dialogue” between all sides, saying it was “more urgent than ever”.
French President Emmanuel Macron also spoke to Iraqi leaders on Tuesday and told them “his concern about the situation in Iraq”, according to the Elysee. He called his availability “to contribute to dialogue and consultations” between the various parties, noting it “the only way that can help get out of the crisis”.
But talks are not on the agenda of Muktada al-Sadr. “We have already tried to negotiate with them and experienced, but it has brought nothing to us and the country, even despite their promises of ruin and corruption (…),” he Reprimanded. “No interest is expected from such dialogue”.
AFP. with

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Turkey seeks to resolve row over Russian-built $20B nuclear plant

BY DAILY SABAH WITH AGENCIES
ISTANBUL AUG 03, 2022 – 3:21 PM GMT+3

The site of the fourth reactor of Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant, in Mersin, southern Turkey, July 21, 2022. (IHA Photo)

Turkey’s Energy and Natural Resources Ministry on Tuesday said it was seeking to resolve a dispute between the parties involved in the construction of a $20 billion nuclear power plant by Russia’s state-run nuclear energy firm Rosatom in Akkuyu, southern Turkey.

Akkuyu Nükleer, a Rosatom subsidiary that is building four reactors at the site on the Mediterranean coast, on Saturday said it signed an agreement with TSM Enerji to undertake the remaining construction work at the plant after terminating a deal with Turkish firm IC Içtaş.
IC Içtaş on Monday called the move unlawful and said it had launched a legal challenge. It accused Rosatom of attempting to “reduce Turkish corporate presence” on the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) project.
Mersin-based TSM is owned by three Russia-based companies, according to the Turkish trade registry.
“Our ministry has taken the necessary initiatives to resolve the dispute between the parties,” the Turkish Energy and Natural Resources Ministry said in a statement late on Tuesday.
 
“Our priority is to ensure that all contractors and employees who have been serving at the construction site since the beginning of the project do not suffer any grievances and that the project is put into service on time,” it said.
Akkuyu Nükleer did not give a specific reason for ending the deal with IC Içtaş but said the contract with TSM would ensure work was completed by agreed dates and that workers were paid on time.
IC Içtaş suggested the move could result in a delay in the construction process. It said TSM was a limited liability company that doesn’t have the ability to complete the work.
The company said it would take Rosatom to arbitration in London, as well as pursue domestic legal action in Turkey, according to a statement issued to Bloomberg News on Monday.
The Turkish government aims to start operating the first reactor at the Akkuyu plant by the middle of 2023, the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Republic of Turkey.
The remaining three reactors are due to start operation by the end of 2026, at a rate of one per year to ultimately have a total installed capacity of 4,800 megawatts (MW).
Once completed, the plant is expected to produce up to 10% of domestic electricity needs.
The plant in its current shape is one of the largest construction sites in the world.
The plant, which will have an estimated service life of 60 years with a possibility to extend it for another 20 years, will produce carbon-free energy around the clock. As a baseload plant, it will play a leading role in reducing dependence on imported energy resources, especially natural gas.
The giant project is expected to employ around 15,000 people during its peak construction period, and about 4,000 people during its operations.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has previously suggested that Turkey could work with Russia on the construction of two further plants. He is set to hold talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi on Friday.
Akkuyu is the world’s first nuclear power plant project implemented through a build-own-operate model. Under the long-term contract, Rosatom has agreed to provide the power plant’s design, construction, maintenance, operation and decommissioning.
The firm holds a 99.2% stake in the project that is estimated to cost around $20 billion (TL 357.98 billion), marking the biggest investment in Turkey’s history implemented at a single site.
Rosatom has been reported to have sent around $5 billion to Akkuyu Nükleer last week. Two other similar dollar transfers are planned in a matter of weeks, Bloomberg News reported Friday, citing senior Turkish officials with direct knowledge of the matter.

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Women in Jordan rise up against ‘honor killings’

Online News Editor
August 4, 2022 
La Prensa Latina Bilingual Media 

By Hayat al-Dbeas
Amman, Aug 4 (EFE).- Jordanian society is accustomed to news of women and girls being murdered, but the brutality of some of the more recent cases has sparked widespread anger and a movement against the so-called “honor killings.”
Over the past two months in Amman, a student was shot five times by a failed suitor on the campus of the University of Applied Science, and a young woman, who was eight months pregnant, was beaten to death with a hammer by a neighbor.
Another woman was killed by her own brother over a “family dispute,” often used to refer to such “honor killings,” in which a woman is murdered by relatives who believe she had brought shame on the family by committing adultery or engaging in premarital sex.
So far, there are no official figures on femicide rates but the latest report by the Jordanian Women Solidarity Association said that 21 women were killed at the hands of relatives in 2019, 20 in 2020 and 14 during the first 10 months of 2021.
Jordanian society is split between those who reject this type of crime and those who blame the victim and completely agree with what the family does to defend its “honor.”
Women in Jordan have started to rise up against this affliction. On July 22, dozens of women staged a protest outside the Jordanian parliament.
In addition to the crimes that have occurred in recent weeks, there is that of Ahlam, the young woman who was savagely killed by her own family two years ago, in a case that shocked the entire country.
Ahlam was first brutally beaten by her father and brothers in her house in Safut village, next to Amman, and when she ran out into the street to ask for help while covered in blood, her father chased her and hit her on the head with a stone.
He then sat next to his daughter’s body, drinking a cup of tea, according to eyewitnesses.
Protesters demanded reforms to laws they believe encourage the murder of women and allow perpetrators to escape the consequences or get away with light jail sentences.
Lawyer Sakhr Khasawneh, who claims to have handled several of these cases, tells Efe that there is a rule applied in many Arab countries that see murderers who are pardoned by the victim’s families dodge the harshest penalties.
The Jordanian Penal Code encourages this kind of crime by recognizing a mitigating excuse for whoever commits it, says Salma al-Nims, chief of the Jordanian National Committee for Women’s Affairs.
The article al-Nims is referring to offers an “extenuating excuse” to a man who catches his wife or one of his female relatives in flagrante delicto and proceeds to kill her, kill the man she is with or kill them both.
Sociologist Amal Awawda, from the Center for Women’s Studies, believes that such leniency towards “honor” crimes in Jordan is rooted in social upbringing that gives men their social status and a feeling of guardianship over women.
The customary system of protection and guardianship of women makes men, whether they are brothers, sons or husbands, view them as if they were their property, leading them to assume that violently assaulting or killing them is permitted and legitimate, she says. EFE
hy-ar-ppa/smq/ks

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Lower House refutes reports on MPs’ salary increase

[03-08-2022 01:24 PM]

Ammon News -The permanent office of the Lower House on Tuesday refuted reports that some media and social media outlets circulated regarding an increase of MPs salaries.
The office said that it had decided to disburse JD200 for two months for each office director for June and July only, noting that amount is disbursed from the allowance provision from the Chamber’s budget in accordance with the powers granted to the speaker and permanent office as per the 2022 General Budget Law.
The office added that the government cannot be asked to increase expenditures mentioned in the chapter concerned with Parliament, especially that such a demand violates the General Budget Law, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported.
The office added that lawmakers receive allocations set for the budget of the Lower House and do not receive salaries for their not being employees. It added that MPs are elected members who receive allocations that are not subject to pension.

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Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament declares his support for al-Kadhimi initiative, sends a message to the Iraqi people

August 3, 2022 – Iraqi News Agency

Baghdad-INA
Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced on Wednesday his support for Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi’s initiative and sent a message to the Iraqi people.
“We express our absolute support for the national initiative you have launched to convene a national dialogue table to reach a solution to the political crisis in brotherly Iraq,” Berri said in a letter to the Iraqi people, which was received by the Iraqi news agency INA.
“To the extent that I have been, and will continue to call on all Lebanese on their different affiliations, differences and spiritual and political orientations to dialogue as the only way to settle all internal contentious issues under the roof of unity and the constitution and to meet on a word, and to the same extent and from the position of brotherhood embodied by the Government and people of Iraq , I appeal to the brotherly Iraqi people and all their leaders and national and spiritual components, especially the sons of the same team to responding quickly to the call of reason and the good word and to meet the invitation to participate in the inevitable dialogue table to keep Iraq strong for all Iraqis and all Arabs which is central to making and building trust between the Arab and Islamic neighbors,” he said.
“I pray for Allah that the Iraqi people to continue security and success in your initiative and in leading Iraq towards greater prosperity and ability,” he said to al-Kadhimi.

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Here’s The Timeline Of The The Beirut Blast Investigation, 2 Years Later

Mohammad Ali Al Hasan· 
Lebanon News
·August 3, 2022

 

AP/Hussein Malla

Home
 

After a massive explosion erupted at the Port of Beirut on August 4th, 2020, the families of the victims demanded justice and accountability for their beloved ones.
Unfortunately, however, the families of the 234+ victims have been waiting for 2 years but to no avail. This is due to the protection offered by the Lebanese political establishment to the suspects.
Despite the many promises made to the people throughout the past 2 years, suspected politicians are still evading justice with the help of traditional Lebanese parties.

Due to the ongoing complications encountered in this case, a timeline of the sequence of events from one year after the investigation to date has become necessary to document.
In July 2021, Judge Tarek Bitar was seeking the prosecution of senior politicians and security officials and requested the lifting of pertinent immunities.
August 2021

Families of the victims organize a protest to block MPs from attending a Parliament session. The session aimed to discuss Judge Bitar’s request to have the immunity of several officials lifted.
Higher Defense Council of Lebanon refuses to grant the necessary permission for Judge Bitar to prosecute Maj. Gen. Tony Saliba.
Judge Bitar is allowed to resume his investigations after the defendants submitted their formal defenses.
A field simulation of the welding that took place at the Port of Beirut’s Warehouse 12 before the explosion was conducted under the supervision of Judge Bitar. The aim was to conclude whether welding had a direct effect that led to the deadly blast.
Judge Bitar summons former caretaker PM Hassan Diab for interrogation.
Lebanese Parliament stops Judge Bitar from summoning PM Diab.
The mothers of the victims gathered in front of Judge Ghassan Ouaidat’s home protesting against the political interference in the investigation.
Judge Bitar questions the former member of the Higher Council of Customs, Hani Hajj Shehadeh, and decides to issue an arrest warrant against him.

September 2021

Former PM Diab leaves to the US after getting summoned again for questioning.
Human Rights Watch demands an international probe into the Beirut Blast.
Judge Bitar issues an arrest warrant for ex-Public Works Minister Youssef Fenianos.
EU insists on the must to strengthen the Beirut Blast investigation, deploring the lack of cooperation of the majority of the Lebanese Parliament and certain ministries with the judicial authorities.
Judge Bitar sets dates for questioning three Lebanese MPs over the Beirut Port Explosion.
Several Lebanese officials come together to file a lawsuit against Judge Bitar.
Former Minister Youssef Fenianos files a lawsuit against Judge Bitar to have him dismissed from the Beirut Port Explosion investigation.
A protest is organized in front of the Justice Palace in Beirut in support of Judge Bitar’s work.
Former minister Nouhad Machnouk files a lawsuit against Judge Bitar, pausing the investigation until a top court rules on the case.

October 2021

Beirut Court of Appeal unanimously rejects the complaint against Judge Bitar, allowing for the investigation to proceed.
Civil Court of Cassation rejects the request of ex-ministers Ali Hassan Khalil and Ghazi Zeaiter to remove Judge Bitar.
Lebanese Judge Association announces that they will no longer accept requests to remove Judge Bitar.
Lebanese Supreme Judicial Court meets Judge Bitar to hear his opinion on Beirut Blast Investigation.
Russia provides satellite images of the Beirut Port to help the investigation.
Former PM Diab files a lawsuit against the Lebanese State, forcing Judge Bitar to suspend the prosecution against him.
Ex-Minster Ghazi Zeaiter refuses to attend his questioning.

November 2021

Judge Bitar says he won’t back down from the Beirut Port case.
Former minister Fenianos files a lawsuit, again, against Judge Bitar, forcing him to halt his work until a further decision is taken.
Judge Habib Mezher gets suspended after attempting to interfere in Beirut Blast Probe.
Three senior Lebanese judges resign over interference by politicians in the work of the judiciary in the Beirut Blast Investigation.
The United Nations ignores requests from Lebanese victim families for information to help the official investigation into the Beirut Port Explosion.

December 2021

Judge Bitar is allowed to continue his investigation after the request by ex-Minister Fenianos gets rejected by the President of the 12th Chamber of the Court.

January 2022
No new events regarding the Beirut Port Blast investigation in January of 2022.
February 2022

Families of the Beirut Blast victims organize a rally to demand an effective investigation.
Friends of a Beirut Blast victim send a letter to French President Macron.

March 2022

Families of the Beirut Blast victims file a lawsuit against former ministers Ghazi Zeaiter and Ali Hassan Khalil, under the charges of abusing their defense’s rights and status.

April 2022

Security forces and families of Beirut Blast victims clash during a protest.
A law to stop the demolition of the Beirut Port Silos until the investigation finishes was proposed by Lebanese Forces MPs.

May 2022

Beirut Blast suspects Ghazi Zaiter and Ali Hassan Khalil get reelected in the 2022 Lebanese Elections.
Opposition MPs organize a march in Beirut under the slogan “We Will Not Forget August 4th, 2020”

June 2022

Opposition MP Mark Daou gets cyberattacked after calling for sanctions on Beirut Blast-linked politicians.
Lawyers of Beirut Port Blast victims demand fining two MPs.

July 2022

Lebanese Parliament elects Supreme Council for Prosecuting Presidents and Ministers.

August 4th, 2022

Several marches are planned in Beirut as the Lebanese people are taking to the streets to commemorate the 2nd anniversary of the Beirut Blast and reinforce their demands for justice.
Two years have passed with no accountability in sight. The families of the victims along with the Lebanese people continue to protest, determined to pursue justice all the way.

The 234 Beirut Blast Victims, Remember Their Names.

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