Kuwaiti court acquits 70 accused over
2011 storming of parliament
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[December 09, 2013]
KUWAIT (Reuters) — A Kuwait court on
Monday acquitted 70 people, including nine former lawmakers, of storming
the parliament in 2011 in an unprecedented protest against the then
prime minister, a senior member of the ruling family.
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Kuwait, a U.S. ally and major oil exporter, has largely weathered
the popular uprisings that ousted autocratic rulers elsewhere in the
Arab Spring, thanks in part to its generous welfare state.
But the blocking of a request by lawmakers to question then prime
minister Sheikh Nasser al-Mohammad al-Sabah about corruption
allegations prompted the 2011 protesters to force their way into
parliament, in contrast to previous peaceful sit-ins. Sheikh Nasser,
a nephew of the emir, denies the allegations.
Monday's acquittal of the protesters "was expected because there was
no crime but it was a peaceful expression (of discontent) as a
reaction for cancelling the questioning (of the prime minister),"
Fawaz al-Jadey, a member of the defense team, told Reuters.
He said the verdict was subject to an appeal by the prosecutor.
State news agency KUNA also said the court had acquitted the 70
defendants.
Protesters stormed the parliament, demanding it should be sacked,
the day after it voted against the request to question Sheikh Nasser
in the assembly.
Footage showed people including some MPs pushing security guards
aside as they forced open the doors of the assembly. Some jumped on
a table inside the assembly room while white headdresses worn by
Gulf men were strewn on the floor outside.
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The protesters shouted: "The people want to bring down the head (of
government)", echoing the demands of thousands of demonstrators in
Egypt earlier that year calling for the ouster of president Hosni
Mubarak.
Kuwait allows more freedom of speech than some other Gulf states but
a protracted standoff between the elected parliament and a
government dominated by the Al-Sabah ruling family has dominated the
political scene for years.
There were some large-scale demonstrations in 2012 after the
country's ruler changed its electoral law. But the protest movement
has largely dwindled since then and Kuwait has shown limited
tolerance for dissent.
(Reporting by Mahmoud Harby; writing by Rania El Gamal; editing by
Sami Aboudi/Ruth Pitchford)
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