Kuwait’s top court has dissolved parliament and called for new
elections after an opposition challenge to the voting system was thrown
out.
Head judge Youssef al-Mutawa said the Constitutional Court made its decision after examining and rejecting the challenge.
Kuwait's emir
made a televised plea for citizens to accept the changes to the voting
rules, asking them to reject "the voices of chaos".
"I
accept...the ruling of the Constitutional Court regardless of its
content, and I call on all citizens to respect it and abide by it," Emir
Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah said in a special broadcast on state
television late on Sunday.
The case had questioned the
constitutionality of a change to the electoral system ordered by the
emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah.
Mutawa said the hearing had
decided not to make a ruling on the challenge, in effect leaving the
emir’s decree unchanged. Al-Sabah is described as “immune and
inviolable” in the constitution.
The government said the new
system, which reduced the number of votes per person to one from four,
brought Kuwait in line with other countries.
However, opposition
politicians said the decree was unconstitutional and an attempt to stop
them from forming a majority or bloc in parliament.
Al-Sabah had
used emergency powers in October last year to change voting rules, six
weeks before the country was due to hold parliamentary elections.
Opposition
politicians boycotted the poll, and on the eve of the election tens of
thousands of Kuwaitis marched in protest against the decree.
Protest march ban
The Interior Ministry said on Friday it would not allow any unlicensed protest marches.
"We
will never allow any rallies or marches outside Erada Square," said a
statement from the Interior Ministry, referring to a designated protest
area opposite parliament.
State news agency KUNA said any protesters who break the law would be dealt with firmly.
Political
parties are banned in Kuwait and the four-vote system helped opposition
MPs form alliances in elections and gave them more clout in parliament.
Islamic,
nationalist and liberal opposition groups said the emir's decree would
enable the government to manipulate election results and subsequent
legislation as a consequence.
The case has international
significance because political stability in Kuwait, owner of more than
six percent of global oil reserves, has traditionally depended on
co-operation between the government and the elected parliament, the
oldest and most powerful legislature in the Arab Gulf states.
The country sits in a strategic position between Saudi Arabia and Iraq and across the Gulf from Iran.
Kuwait
has been ruled by the Al-Sabah dynasty since 1750, but the opposition
has repeatedly said it is challenging the constitutional system and not
Al-Sabah rule per se
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