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Former Kuwaiti Member of Parliament Falah al-Sawagh (R) helps a Kuwaiti child toss a donation of Kuwaiti dinars into a wooden box designated to support the Syrian Opposition at his “diwaniya”, which is a traditional evening meeting, in Fintas, June 19, 2013. At a “diwaniya”, Kuwaiti men drop banknotes into a box, opening a campaign to arm up to 12,000 anti-government fighters in Syria. Al-Sawagh estimates this type of campaign in Kuwait raised several million dollars during the last Ramadan religious holiday. Sunni-ruled Kuwait has denounced the Syrian army’s actions and sent $300 million in humanitarian aid to help the millions displaced by the conflict in which more than 90,000 have died. Unlike Saudi Arabia and Qatar, Kuwaiti government policy is against arming the rebels. But the U.S. ally allows more public debate than other Gulf states and has tolerated campaigns in private houses or on social media that are difficult to control. Kuwaiti authorities are nevertheless worried that Image Credit: Reuters

Kuwait: At a traditional evening meeting known as a “diwaniya”, Kuwaiti men drop banknotes into a box, opening a campaign to arm up to 12,000 anti-government fighters in Syria. A new Mercedes is parked outside to be auctioned off for cash.

They are Sunni Muslim and mainly Islamist like many Syrian rebels who have been trying for two years to overthrow President Bashar Al Assad.

“The world has abandoned the Syrian people and the Syrian revolution so it is normal that people start to give money to people who are fighting,” said Falah Al Sawagh, a former opposition member of Kuwait’s parliament, surrounded by friends drinking sweet tea.

In just four hours the campaign collected 80,000 dinars ($282,500). The box moves to a new house each day for a week.

Al Sawagh estimates this type of campaign in Kuwait, one of the world’s richest countries per capita, raised several million dollars during the last Ramadan.

The fighting in Syria has stoked Sunni-Shi’ite tensions in the region, with Iran and Lebanese Shi’ite militia Hezbollah backing Al Assad, and nations such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar backing the rebels.

Kuwait has denounced the Syrian army’s actions and sent $300 million in humanitarian aid to help the millions displaced by the conflict in which more than 90,000 have died.

Arming the rebels is against government policy but US ally Kuwait allows more public debate than other Gulf states and has tolerated campaigns in private houses or on social media that are difficult to control.

Kuwaiti authorities are nevertheless worried that the fundraising for Syria could stir sectarian tensions. Unofficial funding of Syria’s opposition is also under scrutiny by the West in case it goes to Al Qaida militants among the rebels.

Some opposition Islamist politicians and Sunni clerics have openly campaigned to arm rebel fighters, using social media and posters with telephone hotlines in public places. Former MP Waleed Al Tabtabie, a conservative Salafi Islamist, posted pictures of himself on Twitter clad in combat gear in Syria.

Kuwait’s minister for cabinet affairs, Shaikh Mohammad Al Mubarak Al Sabah, said what was happening in Syria was “heart-wrenching” and understood why Kuwaitis wanted to help.

“Human nature is such that you cannot control what people believe in and how they want to act,” he said.

“What is happening in Syria just flames the emotions on both sides. That’s why we are trying to steer a middle ground.”

Syria is blocked from international bank transfers from Kuwait because of sanctions, so former MP Al Sawagh visited the Syrian town of Aleppo last month with cash in his luggage for rebel fighters. He did not say how much he took.

“Our only rule is to collect money and to deliver this money to our brothers which are helping the Syrian people,” said Al Sawagh, a member of a local group linked to the Muslim Brotherhood which is in power in Egypt and is influential in other Arab states.

Al Sawagh and others in his campaign also travel to Turkey and Jordan to hand over money to intermediaries.

“They have absolute freedom to spend this money. If they can recruit mujahideen for defending themselves and their sanctity with this money, then this is their choice,” he said, referring to fighters who engage in jihad or holy war.

Washington is worried the money may help strengthen fighters with links to Al Qaida who are hostile not just to Al Assad but also to the United States and US-allied Gulf ruling families.

It wants Western and Arab allies to direct all aid to Syrian rebels through the Western-backed Supreme Military Council.

A fiery speech by Kuwaiti Sunni Muslim cleric Shafi Al Ajami raised alarm earlier this month with a call for more arms.

“The mujahideen, we are arming them from here, and from the Arabian Peninsula, the Gulf states, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq and Turkey,” he said.

The speech was laced with references to the sectarian nature of the conflict and unnerved authorities in Kuwait where Shi’ites make up an estimated 15 to 20 per cent minority of the population. Parliament, the cabinet and the ruling emir issued strong rebukes.

“I do not hide from you feelings of anxiety about what emerged recently, manifestations and practices that carry the abhorrent breath of sectarianism which should be denounced,” Emir Shaikh Sabah Al Ahmed Al Sabah said on state television.

Such acts could “lure the fire of fanaticism and extremism,” he said.

Ajami spoke following a call by prominent cleric Shaikh Yousef Al Qaradawi, an Egyptian based in Qatar, for jihad in Syria after fighters from Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shi’ite militant group, intervened to help Al Assad’s army.

The calls to holy war by several influential clerics in the region only encouraged more donations, Kuwaitis said.

“Women have also been donating their gold,” said Bader Al Dahoum, a former Islamist opposition MP.

“After the fatwas (edicts), people are giving more.” The men at the diwaniya said one large Kuwaiti family planned to equip 28 mujahideen in Syria, estimating the cost at 700 dinars per fighter. Smaller families sponsor two or three, while a member of one of Kuwait’s powerful merchant families donated 250,000 dinars.

Weapons supplied by Qatar and its allies include small arms such as AK-47 rifles, rocket propelled grenades, hand grenades and ammunition, according to a Qatari official. Qatar also provides instructions on battlefield techniques.

Campaigning for funds to arm the rebels makes certain politicians more popular in Kuwait, said Osama Al Munawer, a former opposition MP.

“I was a member of the National Assembly and people were blaming us - why don’t you give them weapons?” he said.

“They said, food - they have it, but they need to defend themselves because the situation is very bad.”