Google – AFP, Omar Hasan, 31 October 2012
![]() |
Supporters
of arrested Kuwaiti former opposition MP Mussallam al-Barrak\
protest near the
central prison in Kuwait City (AFP, Yasser al-Zayyat)
|
KUWAIT CITY
— Kuwait riot police Wednesday used stun grenades and tear gas to disperse
thousands of angry demonstrators who marched on the central prison where a
leading opposition figure is detained.
The protest
came hours after the public prosecutor extended the detention of Mussallam
al-Barrak for 10 days over remarks deemed critical of the emir, in a crackdown
on dissent ahead of December 1 snap polls.
The crowd,
estimated by organisers at 10,000, first gathered at Barrak's residence in
Andalus, 20 kms (12 miles) southwest of Kuwait City before marching on the
central jail about three kilometers away.
Chanting
"freedom for Barrak" and holding banners reading "The nation
wants the release of the 'conscience of the nation'" -- the term used for
nationalist Barrak -- the protesters were faced with stun grenades as they
arrived at the prison.
Activists
told AFP that there were at least two other smaller demonstrations in
solidarity with Barrak in south and north of the Gulf state which has seen an
increased number of protests in recent months amid intense political disputes.
More than
100 protesters were hurt at a massive rally on October 21 organised by the
opposition to demonstrate against the amendment of the disputed electoral law.
The
opposition is planning a second protest on November 4.
Former MP
Barrak was interrogated for five hours on Tuesday on accusations that he
undermined the status of the emir at a rally on October 15 when he warned
against amending the electoral law and also cautioned Kuwait was becoming
autocratic.
The
prosecutor, however, freed another opposition figure former MP Faisal al-Muslim
on a $355 bail after questioning him on similar charges, his lawyer Abdullah
al-Muslim said on Twitter.
Muslim was
the sixth former opposition MP to have been summoned for interrogation on
accusations of making public remarks critical of Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad
al-Sabah.
Last week,
the court released three former opposition lawmakers after five days in custody
on similar accusations and freed a fourth former MP after a brief
interrogation.
Separately,
the foreign ministry said late Tuesday it would take legal action against
prominent opposition writer Mohammad Abdulqader al-Jassem over an article
deemed offensive to leaders in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
In his blog
Tuesday, Jassem warned Saudi King Abdullah and the crown prince of Abu Dhabi,
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahayan, that protests in Kuwait could quickly
trigger similar events in their countries.
He also
criticised the two leaders' reported support and encouragement of the Kuwaiti
crackdown.
Jassem told
AFP on Wednesday that the authorities have yet to notify him of any legal
action.
"I
have not broken the law in my article and did not threaten anyone," he
said. He was jailed on three occasions in 2009, 2010 and 2011 for a total of
over four months for allegedly criticising the emir and former premier.
The current
crisis flared after the government decided to amend the electoral law in what
the opposition claims is a step aimed at electing a rubber stamp parliament.
Twenty-nine
candidates registered Wednesday -- the opening day for registering their names
for the December poll -- compared to 109 who registered on the first day of
registration in the previous election as the opposition boycotted.
The present
registration process ends on November 9.
Earlier on
Wednesday a dozen activists from the Civil Democratic Movement, an opposition
youth group, staged a symbolic protest outside the interior ministry's election
department in Kuwait City after it started registering the candidates.
The new
elections are the second this year and the fifth since mid-2006 amid political
turmoil in the emirate which became the first Arab state in the Gulf to embrace
democracy and issue a constitution in 1962.
The
February legislative polls, in which the opposition won a landslide victory,
were nullified by the constitutional court on June 20 on the grounds of flawed
procedures.
The court
also scrapped parliament and reinstated the pro-government house elected in
2009. The latter was eventually dissolved early October and snap polls were
called.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.