Dubai: Kuwait dismissed on Thursday criticism by Amnesty International that human rights have been eroding in the country since the Arab Spring protests erupted across the region four years ago and said it remained an open society based on the rule of law.
In a report published on Wednesday, Amnesty accused the Gulf Arab state of using a “web of vague and overly broad defamation laws” to crack down on freedom of expression, of shutting media outlets and stripping some critics of their citizenship.
The rights group also said there had been an increase in prosecutions over comments deemed “offensive” to the government.
“Kuwait enjoys an open and democratic society where over two dozen independent newspapers and television channels host lively debates on Kuwaiti politics on a daily basis,” said Information Ministry Undersecretary Tareq Al Mezrem in a statement.
“No crime is charged, or penalty imposed, except through the virtues of the law ... The ministry confirms adherence to the principle of freedom of expression, that is guaranteed by the Kuwaiti constitution and Kuwaiti law,” he added.
Mezrem said Kuwait was preparing a new media law that would “adhere to the constitution”, without giving further details.
Kuwait avoided large-scale protests during the Arab Spring when some rulers in the region were overthrown, but citizens held large street protests in 2012 over changes to the electoral law.
Earlier this year, a court sentenced a human-rights activist to three years in jail on charges of insulting the Ruler.
Musallam Al Barrak, a former member of parliament, this year began serving a two-year term for a 2012 speech criticising an election law which he and other opposition politicians said was intended to prevent them getting power.