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Kuwaiti opposition protesters hold a giant gavel as they demonstrate outside the Palace of Justice in Kuwait City in the early hours of November 27, 2011 against the arrest of pro-reform activists over charges of storming parliament last week. Protesters displayed a four-metre (yard) wooden gavel saying it is a replacement for the original gavel that parliament officials accused activists of stealing, which was one of the charges. Image Credit: AFP

Manama: Kuwait’s government is expected to resign Monday following an emergency meeting to discuss the ongoing political crisis that has gripped the country, a local daily said.

The resignation will come ahead of a mass rally on Monday and a move to grill the prime minister on Tuesday.

The Emir will accept the government’s decision and will also dissolve the parliament constitutionally, Al Siyassah reported on Monday, citing “well-informed sources” that it did not name.

According to Al Aan, a Kuwaiti news portal, three ministers are adamant to quit the government over the political crisis.

Mohammad Al Affasi, the justice and social affairs minister, handed in his resignation after he refused to sign a request to lift the immunity of eight MPs in the parliament storming case, the news portal said.

Dr Hilal Al Sayer, the health minister, and Abdul Wahab Al Haroon, the state minister for planning and development, have also insisted on quitting the government, it said.

Dissolution of Parliament

Both the resignation of the government and the dissolution of the parliament have been key demands by an opposition intent on reaching its objectives after weeks of bitter showdowns that culminated in the storming of the parliament and the arrest of several people.

On Sunday, the public prosecution extended the detention of 24 suspects in the storming of the parliament by 21 days and freed seven on bail of KD 1,000.

According to the daily, 16 detainees are being investigated for their alleged role in the storming amid expectations that the public prosecution will today call for lifting the parliamentary immunity of the lawmakers who led the storming on November 16.

Detainees

As the investigations into the “Black Wednesday” continued, parents of the detainees and opposition MPs continued to camp in front of the Justice Palace to demand the release of the detainees ahead of “the biggest mass rally” on Monday, expected to bring together several groups and organisations.

The interior ministry said that while Kuwaitis had the right to express their views freely, they must comply with the rules and regulations and avoid abuses.

Several lawmakers have warned that they would use street pressure to force the government to step down.

However, other MPs have condemned the tactics, saying that they would deepen the political crisis and cause further chaos in the country.

MPs Mislim Al Barak, Faysal Al Mislim and Abdul Rahman Al Anjari, three opposition lawmakers, had filed to grill Prime Minister Shaikh Nasser Al Mohammad in parliament on Tuesday over allegations that several lawmakers had received huge sums of money in their bank accounts to influence their voting. The case is being investigated.

Possible scenarios if Kuwait government tenders resignation Monday 

  • The resignation is accepted. However, the parliament continues to hold its sessions as its dissolution requires a decree submitted by the government to the Emir and the caretaker government cannot do it.
  • In case there is a tendency to dissolve the parliament constitutionally, the current government continues its work until new parliamentary elections are held within two months of the dissolution decree. The government then submits its resignation to the Emir who appoints the prime minister.
  • The non-constitutional dissolution of the parliament is based on suspending articles of the constitution. However, such an option could result in new political crises far deeper and more complex than the one gripping Kuwait.
  • In the fourth scenario, the government's resignation is rejected. The government and the parliament remain in place, which means a deepening of the political tension and the showdown between them. However, this option seems slim after reports that three ministers have insisted on quitting the government.