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News ID: 101272
Publish Date : 05 April 2022 - 21:54

Kuwait’s Government Resigns

DUBAI (AP) – Kuwait’s government resigned on Tuesday, just months after its formation.
Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al Hamad Al Sabah submitted the cabinet’s resignation to the crown prince, state-run KUNA news agency reported, ahead of a no-confidence vote in Parliament later this week that sought to remove him from office.
It marks Kuwait’s third collective government resignation in the past year and a half. A host of new faces, including some picks to appease opposition blocs, had been appointed to ministerial posts as recently as December, with their resignation now reflecting their failure to make reforms.
Opposition has been mounting against Sheikh Sabah. Angry lawmakers hauled him in for extensive interrogations last week over his alleged corruption and mismanagement. They publicly declared him “unsuitable” and called for a new prime minister to tackle the country’s problems and secure badly needed reforms.
Cabinet’s resignation comes after the defense and interior ministers submitted their resignations earlier this year. Exasperated, the two senior ministers decried their inability to make anything happen in oil-rich Kuwait because of Parliament’s rowdy opposition. Lawmakers in recent months have increasingly expressed their political frustrations and mistrust by questioning various unpopular ministers and stalling major projects.
Although soaring oil prices amid Russia’s war in Ukraine have recently created a windfall for Kuwait, they’ve also served as a reminder of the nation’s utter dependence on oil revenues and need to diversify. However the International Monetary Fund now expects Kuwait to run a budget surplus after years in the red and see its gross domestic product increase by 2.7%.
Years of low oil prices, coupled with the coronavirus pandemic, pushed the country’s account deficit to 16.6% of its GDP last year.
Kuwait has given its parliament more influence than similar bodies in other Persian Gulf states, including the power to pass and block laws, question ministers, and submit no-confidence motions against senior government officials.