Kuwait: Kuwait’s justice and Islamic affairs minister has rejected remarks from a senior US official that he called for jihad in Syria and promoted the funding of terrorism, state news agency KUNA said, citing a cabinet statement released late on Monday.
Nayef Al Ajmi was quoted in the statement as saying that comments made by US Treasury Undersecretary David Cohen in March, reported in US media, were “baseless and groundless”.
Unlike Gulf Arab states Saudi Arabia and Qatar, Kuwaiti government policy is against arming rebels fighting to topple Syrian President Bashar Al Assad, and has led a humanitarian fund-raising campaign for Syria through the United Nations.
However, the US-allied country allows fund-raising in private houses as well as on social media, which it says is hard to control. Some of the fund-raising campaigns have been for aid for Syrian refugees but others openly call for funds to buy weapons for opposition fighters.
Some Kuwaitis have gone to fight in the years-long conflict which has drawn in Islamist combatants from across the Middle East and from Europe and Asia and stoked sectarian tensions.
Cohen said that Al Ajmi had “a history of promoting jihad in Syria” and that his image had been featured on fund-raising posters for a financier of the Al Qaida-linked Al Nusra Front.
Al Ajmi’s ministry said it would allow non-profit organisations and charities to collect donations for Syrians at Kuwaiti mosques, Cohen said, describing this as “a measure we believe can be easily exploited by Kuwait-based terrorist fund-raisers”.
The Kuwaiti cabinet statement said the government “reiterated Kuwait’s firm rejection to all forms of terrorism regardless of its justifications”, noting that Kuwait would cooperate on fighting against terrorism.
“Al Ajmi affirmed that all his activities and efforts are part of Kuwait’s well-recognised official and unofficial efforts in charitable, religious and humanitarian realms,” it said.