Kuwait’s Constitutional Court on Sunday ruled that last September’s parliamentary election, in which the Opposition made gains, was void and that the previous Assembly must be reinstated.
The move comes at a time of renewed friction between the elected parliament and government and follows the reappointment this month of the country’s Prime Minister, whose government had resigned in the stand-off with the parliament. Kuwait’s crown prince last year dissolved the parliament and called early polls in an effort to end prolonged domestic political feuding that has hindered fiscal reform.
However, Justice Mohammad bin Naji on Sunday said the court had declared that dissolution of the parliament as void and had annulled the early elections held in September. “The constitutional authority of the dissolved parliament shall be restored as of the date of this ruling,” he told the court session attended by reporters. A lawmaker from the dissolved Assembly, Abdullah Al-Turaiji, welcomed the move as “correcting the government’s mistake in dealing with the parliament”.
Kuwait, an Opec oil producer, bans political parties but has given its legislature more influence than similar bodies in other Gulf monarchies. Frequent political bickering has often led to cabinet reshuffles and dissolutions of the parliament, hampering investment and reforms aimed at reducing the country’s heavy reliance on oil revenue. ”Kuwait does not deserve such farces,” MP Saleh Ashour said on Twitter after the court ruling.