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Musallam Al Barrak Image Credit: AFP

Kuwait: Kuwait’s public prosecutor on Wednesday ordered opposition leader Mussallam Al Barrak to be held in custody after he was questioned for allegedly insulting the judiciary, his lawyer said.

“The public prosecutor decided to detain him pending further questioning later today,” Humoud Al Hajeri wrote on Twitter after Al Barrak was questioned for several hours overnight.

Mohammad Al Jassem, another lawyer for the former MP, said his client was questioned for alleged slander and insults to the supreme judicial council and its chairman, Faisal Al Marshed.

Dozens of activists and former opposition MPs gathered outside the police headquarters where Al Barrak was held as opposition groups called for a public rally in Kuwait City later Wednesday.

Al Barrak was questioned over two lawsuits filed by the judicial council and Al Marshed over remarks he made at a June 10 public rally that were deemed offensive.

He had claimed that former senior officials including members of the ruling family had stolen tens of billions of dollars from public funds and engaged in money laundering.

Al Barrak, who also criticised the judiciary, charged that the former officials had deposited the funds in foreign banks including one in Israel.

The scandal was later linked to claims that the same officials were seen in video footage plotting a coup.

Those allegations were made in a lawsuit filed last month by Shaikh Ahmad Fahad Al Sabah, a senior ruling family member and former energy minister.

The claims plunged the Gulf state into a political crisis that prompted the emir to call for calm and let the judiciary handle the issue.

Before being questioned, Al Barrak said the public prosecutor was not impartial because he is on the judicial council which sued him.

He also said the public prosecutor should have initiated the case by interrogating the former officials who allegedly plotted the coup and stole the money.

Most opposition groups are not represented in parliament after boycotting an election last July in protest at a change to the electoral law.

Kuwait experienced the worst domestic political turmoil in its history between mid-2006 and last year.