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The End of the Tunisia Model

The Country’s Democracy Has Died—but May Yet Be Reborn 

By 
August 15, 2022

Foreign Affairs Magazine
URL: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/tunisia/end-tunisia-model

(Left) Opponents of Tunisian President Kais Saied protest in Tunis, September 2021
Zoubeir Souissi / Reuters

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Ayear ago, Tunisia’s fledgling democracy—the last to survive after a series of popular uprisings swept the Arab world in 2011—faced a severe test after an extraordinary self-coup by President Kais Saied on July 25, 2021. Within a matter of hours, Saied fired Tunisia’s prime minister, suspended its democratically elected parliament for 30 days, and assumed all executive power. Saied justified his actions by citing Article 80 of Tunisia’s 2014 constitution, which allows a president who determines that the country is facing “imminent danger” to take “any measures necessitated by the exceptional circumstances.”
But what was initially described as a temporary emergency measure has now been extended indefinitely. On July 25, 2022, Tunisians approved a constitutional referendum that effectively codifies Saied’s power grab into Tunisian law. The so-called Tunisia model of democratic transition is now at death’s door. Tunisian opposition and civil society leaders are making heroic efforts to revive it, but they will need need urgent and sustained support from the international community if they are to succeed.
DISMANTLING DEMOCRACY
In the months since his initial power grab last July, Saied has systematically destroyed Tunisia’s remaining democratic institutions, either by suspending them outright or replacing their members with loyalists. On September 22, 2021, in a startlingly explicit signal of the president’s long-term intentions, he issued Decree 117, transferring the powers of the parliament to the presidency and allowing presidential rule by decree in all matters. At the same time, in a particularly odd move for a former constitutional law professor, Saied suspended most of Tunisia’s 2014 constitution, decreeing that the government’s role was to serve the president.

In his efforts to silence his opponents, Saied has subjected hundreds of journalists, activists, and opposition politicians to arbitrary arrests, travel bans, and blistering rhetorical attacks. In December 2021, Saied’s government accused Moncef Marzouki, Tunisia’s first democratically elected president and one of Saied’s most vocal critics, of undermining state security, sentencing him to four years in prison in absentia.
 
Saied has destroyed Tunisia’s democratic institutions, suspending them outright or filling their ranks with loyalists.
 
In February 2022, Saied dissolved Tunisia’s Supreme Judicial Council, replaced its members with loyalists, and empowered himself to fire judges—a power he exercised on June 1 to sack some 57 judges, whom he accused of obstructing terrorism cases, engaging in petty corruption, and committing such “moral crimes” as adultery and attending “alcohol-fueled parties.”

Saied’s coup de grâce was rewriting the constitution, bringing to fruition his long-term vision of a robust presidential system with a neutered legislature. Saied’s hand-selected committee drafted a new constitution in two weeks. In a bizarre turn of events, the head of the constitution-drafting commission, Sadok Belaid, publicly condemned the version Saied released to the public, arguing that it did not reflect the committee’s vision and could lead Tunisia down a path toward autocracy. While the referendum passed with an estimated 95 percent of the vote, the fact that a mere 30 percent of eligible Tunisian voters participated suggests that many of Saied’s supporters have lost faith in him.
A COUNTRY IN CRISIS
Saied’s July 2021 power grab succeeded because he was able to capitalize on three interrelated crises. First, the COVID-19 pandemic reached a peak in Tunisia last summer, exposing the weaknesses of the country’s fragile health-care system and the failures of its government to deliver desperately needed assistance. Second, the Tunisian economy, like most in the world, was devastated by the pandemic, which in its case exacerbated already sky-high unemployment, decimated a once booming tourism industry, and thrust many Tunisians into poverty. Third, the highly fractured political system had become paralyzed, with polarization quickly rising. Politicians violently attacked each other in the halls of parliament, and Saied and Hichem Mechichi, his handpicked prime minister, routinely insulted each other on national television. Saied had grown unhappy with Mechichi’s decision to work with the Islamist party Ennahda and had argued with Mechichi over control of the Interior Ministry.
In this context, it is easy to see why so many Tunisians were willing to give Saied the benefit of the doubt. Desperate and frustrated with an incompetent government, Tunisians placed their hope in a president who, following the path of many other populist leaders worldwide, seemed prepared to take the reins and shake up a stagnant, corrupt system. But as Saied’s intentions became apparent and the economic situation worsened, Saied’s popular support began to disappear.
 
Frustrated Tunisians placed their hope in a president who seemed prepared to shake up a stagnant, corrupt system.
Saied justified his actions on the grounds that he was doing what the people want. Yet throughout the past year, Saied has failed to consult the people. His online consultation process, ostensibly meant to collect public input on the draft constitution, was marred with security concerns and technical difficulties; less than seven percent of eligible voters ended up participating in it. And there is no evidence that the results of that process fed into the draft that Tunisians voted on in late July. Saied and his ministers have rarely addressed the public or allowed the independent media to question them. And his increasingly authoritarian actions have inspired many protests as Tunisians became fed up with Saied’s inability to deliver either economic improvement or political stability.
Saied’s plummeting support is evident in the paltry voter turnout for the referendum on a new constitution—arguably the most consequential vote since the 2011 uprisings. Part of the reason for the low turnout is that most political opposition and civil society groups chose to boycott the vote rather than participate in what they saw as an illegitimate process. But another factor was that Saied can no longer rally his supporters. While there has been a steady stream of pro-Saied protests alongside anti-Saied movements, the pro-Saied protests have never amassed a significant following.
TUNISIANS UNBOWED
Tunisia’s democratic transition achieved relative success in its first decade. However, the past year’s events highlight such transitions’ fragility. As I argued in Foreign Affairs just after Saied’s election, in 2019, Tunisia’s democracy benefited from political leaders who put their country above personal advancement, with multiple rounds of leaders choosing a path of consensus over competition.

That consensus allowed Tunisia to weather complex challenges, but it also stunted the growth of political competition, eventually opening the door for the polarization that paved Saied’s path to autocracy. But Saied’s political program, which completely consolidates power and destroys the consensus model, is not the answer. Instead, Tunisia should marry consensus with consultation and participatory democracy, while allowing room for the opposition. Such a program could build the trust in government that has been sorely lacking in Tunisia since well before Saied’s election.
It is not clear where Saied intends to take Tunisia next. What is clear is that the democratic model created in 2014 will not be revived. Public trust in parliament had reached an all-time low before Saied’s coup, and the Tunisian public is not clamoring for a return of polarization and mudslinging.
Another open question is whether the international community will go back to business as usual once Saied’s new constitution enters into force. In the wake of Saied’s authoritarian power grab, the Biden administration has proposed cutting U.S. assistance to Tunisia in half—explicitly signaling its displeasure with Saied’s actions. Although Western responses to the referendum were scarcely warm, unless Saied takes further steps to reverse Tunisia’s hard-fought freedoms, the democratic world is unlikely to take action to unwind Saied’s year of backsliding.
Over the past decade, Tunisia was repeatedly heralded as the beacon of democracy in the Arab world. Yet it was never offered the same degree of financial and diplomatic support that other young democracies have enjoyed. Instead, Tunisia’s growing economic crisis and deteriorating political situation were drowned out by the myriad conflicts around the Middle East and North Africa. While a Tunisian Marshall Plan may not have saved the country’s transition, greater financial support could have helped Tunisians weather the painful side effects of the economic reforms needed to create long-term sustainable growth. Today, Tunisian civil society actors and political opposition figures need both rhetorical and financial support from the international community for their efforts to drag Tunisia back to the democratic path.
Saied has taken many pages from the dictator’s playbook to roll back a decade’s democratic progress in one year. But while he may have solidified his hold on Tunisian politics, he should remember the very first lesson of the Tunisia model: that the Tunisian people, when united, have the power to demand change and take down a tyrant.

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Islamic Jihad proved any resistance group can destroy biggest Zionist fortress: speaker

August 14, 2022 – 21:30
The Tehran Times
URL: https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/475651/Islamic-Jihad-proved-any-resistance-group-can-destroy-biggest

TEHRAN – Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf averred on Sunday that the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) movement has proven that any single faction of the Islamic Resistance is capable of destroying the largest defensive fortification of the Zionist entity.
Speaking at an open session of Parliament, Qalibaf underlined that the demise of the Israeli entity can be predicted as soon as possible by uniting the ranks of the Resistance.
Qalibaf referred to the anniversary of the heroic resistance recorded by the Lebanese Hezbollah during the 33-day war against the Zionist invaders, saying it marked a new milestone in fighting Israel, according to Al Alam.
The Iranian parliament speaker praised the Islamic resistance, which confronted an entity that, during nearly eight decades of its founding, has been committing crimes against every free person in the world, carrying out assassinations, occupying the lands of others, and committing organized crimes throughout the region.
Also, its existence is at the cost of undermining the security of others, the speaker remarked.
“The world today is witnessing more crimes committed by this entity and the evil plans of the Zionists and their complicity with the arrogant and reactionary regimes (is more evident) than ever before,” Qalibaf added.
Elsewhere in his remarks, the speaker said, “In the first days of the wars in Syria and Iraq, some people made a mistake in their calculations, but when they saw the reality of the crimes committed by the Daesh group, which even worried European countries, they realized this fact… that the defenders of the holy shrines are not only defenders of the shrines of Ahl al-Bayt, peace be upon them, but they are also defending the honor and dignity of dear Iran.”
The speaker was referring to those Iranians who fought Daesh in Syria and Iraq.
Praising the martyrs who defended the holy sites in Iraq and Syria, Qalibaf said they sacrificed themselves for the Iranian people and for the preservation of the holy shrines.
Those who asperse these heroes these days are bringing themselves disappointment and loss by insulting these righteous martyrs, noted Qalibaf, a former military commander and national police chief.
Qalibaf has recently spoken over the phone with Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PJI) secretary general Ziyad al-Nakhalah.
In the conversation, Qalibaf congratulated the Palestinian leader on the recent victory achieved by the Palestinian Islamic resistance against Israel.
“The Islamic Republic of Iran stands by the Palestinian nation and the Palestinian Islamic resistance under all circumstances and with all its might,” Qalibaf told al-Nakhalah, according to Iran’s state news agency IRNA.
Expressing regret over the martyrdom of the commanders of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement in the recent battle with Israel, Qalibaf said, “The Palestinian Islamic Jihad is one of the most effective resistance movements of the Palestinian people against the occupying regime of Jerusalem, which plays an important role in confronting this regime.”
The speaker of the Iranian parliament emphasized the comprehensive support of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the Palestinian people in order to achieve their rights for freedom of the occupied territories.
Al-Nakhalah, for his part, expressed appreciation for the continuous support of the Iranian Parliament and speaker Qalibaf to the struggles of the Palestinian people.

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Palestinian Authority slams ‘colonial’ Trump letter ‘endorsing Israel’s West Bank annexation’

The New Arab Staff
URL: https://english.alaraby.co.uk/news/pa-slams-trump-letter-endorsing-israel-west-bank-annexation

15 August, 2022

The Trump letter appears to endorse Israeli plans to annex large parts of the occupied West Bank.

The Ramallah based PA rejected Trump’s so-called ‘Vision for Peace’ [Getty]

The Palestinian Authority (PA) has slammed a leaked letter that appears to show former US President Donald Trump’s endorsing Israel’s plans for the annexation of large parts of the West Bank.
The letter, released by The Jerusalem Post on Sunday, appeared to contradict claims by Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner that hinted former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced plans to annex the occupied Palestinian territories unilaterally.
In the letter – which has been condemned by the PA – Trump allegedly gave Netanyahu the gren light to annex the West Bank territories two days before the then US president publically announced his so-called peace plan.
The PA foreign ministry said Trump’s ‘Vision for Peace’ was: “official piracy and extension of the ominous Deal of the Century”.

“[It is] an integral part of the previous US administration’s endorsement of, and absolute support for, the occupation and its racist expansionist colonial projects,” it added.
It added that Trump’s “anti-peace plan” gave no legal validity to Israel’s planned annexation of West Bank settlements, which the roadmap envisioned.
Trump’s so-called Deal of the Century would give Israel huge tracts of the occupied West Bank – including illegal settlement lands and the Jordan Valley – leaving Palestinians with slivers of land that were effectively controlled by Israel.
The deal was unanimously denounced by Palestinians and led to worsening relations between the PA and Washington.
The international community were also sceptical of the planned deal, viewing two states based on Israeli-Palestinian 1967 boundaries as the most credible solution to the crisis.

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Eyeing Elections Erdogan Plays Up Diplomatic Gains

A portrait of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is seen at the entrance of a shop as people walk along a street in Istanbul, Turkey, July 20, 2022. (File photo: Reuters)
Reuters, Ankara

Published: 09 August ,2022: 03:40 PM GSTUpdated: 09 August ,2022
Alarabyia News
URL: https://english.alarabiya.net/News/middle-east/2022/08/09/Eyeing-elections-Erdogan-plays-up-diplomatic-gains-

A series of diplomatic wins, capped by the deal to resume Ukraine’s grain exports, provides some respite for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan from Turkey’s economic strife and offers a blueprint of his campaign strategy for elections due next year.
As he prepares for what is shaping up to be the biggest electoral challenge of his nearly 20-year rule, the president is playing up his achievements on the global stage.
“Turkey is going through its strongest period politically, militarily and diplomatically,” he told a crowd of thousands of people in northwest Turkey at the weekend, a day after holding talks in Russia with President Vladimir Putin.

Progress internationally contrasts with a grim economic picture at home, with inflation soaring to 79 percent and the lira languishing near record lows it hit during the most recent currency crisis in December.
Opponents blame Erdogan’s unorthodox economic policies, including a series of interest rate cuts despite high inflation
and the sacking of three central bank governors since 2019, that have left the country running large current account deficits and reliant on external financing to support the economy.
Erdogan said the fruits of the government’s economic policies — prioritizing exports, production and investment —would become clearer in the first quarter of 2023.
International standing
In the meantime, government officials and senior members of his ruling AK Party portray the president as a statesman standing against electoral rivals who are nowhere near matching his international credentials.
“Whether you like him or not, Erdogan is a leader,” a senior Turkish official said, arguing that no other international figure had the same level of contact with top global players.
“There is no leader in Turkey who can replace him.”
The accord to restart exports from Ukraine, cut off since Russia’s February invasion, could ease grain shortages which have left millions of people vulnerable to hunger and driven up global prices.
Brokered by the UN and Turkey, it came after Erdogan secured concessions from NATO over the accession of Nordic countries and initiated a rapprochement with rival powers in the Middle East.
Erdogan also won a pledge in June from US President Joe Biden that he would support the sale of F-16 fighter jets to Turkey, after Washington blocked Ankara from buying more advanced F-35 jets because of its purchase of Russian weaponry.
Election test
The longest-serving ruler and most-dominant political figure since Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded modern Turkey nearly a century ago, Erdogan faces parliamentary and presidential elections that must be held by June 2023.
A survey by pollster Metropoll last week found a slight rise in support for his AK Party to 33.8 percent, still comfortably the most for any single party. But he faces a loose alliance of opposition parties, and polls show him trailing opposition presidential candidates.
Topping voter concerns are the state of the economy, and the presence of 3.6 million Syrian refugees, welcomed by Turkey at the start of Syria’s conflict but increasingly seen by Turks as competitors for jobs and services.
“The government is using foreign policy as material to cover up the economic disaster it has dragged the country into, telling tales of ‘diplomatic victory’ at home,” said Erdogan Toprak, a lawmaker from the main opposition CHP and senior adviser to its leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
Toprak said that even on the diplomatic front, Erdogan was making concessions that “damage the dignity of our country and drag it into weakness.”
Repairing regional ties
Erdogan, who survived huge anti-government protests in 2013 and a coup attempt in 2016, has sought to repair strained ties with other Middle Eastern powers, partly in the hope of attracting badly needed foreign funds.
The UAE, Turkey’s rival in Libya’s civil war and a Gulf dispute over Qatar, has joined China, Qatar and South Korea in currency swap deals with Ankara worth a total of $28 billion. Turkey is also hoping for a deal with Saudi Arabia, and has made moves to improve relations with Egypt and Israel.
“Voters are aware of the benefits of diplomacy. At times they will complain about the economy or refugees, but they will vote for Erdogan for the continuation of an effective Turkey,” an AK Party official said.
Key to Erdogan’s diplomacy in the Middle East and beyond is what he called his “joint understanding, based on mutual trust and respect” with Putin – a relationship causing growing concern among Turkey’s NATO partners since Russia invaded Ukraine.
Russia says it is waging a “special military operation” to rid Ukraine of nationalists and protect Russian-speaking communities.
Turkey has sought to strike a balance by criticizing the Russian invasion and providing Ukraine with arms, while refusing to join the West in imposing sanctions on Russia — a stance it says has helped its mediation efforts reap results.
“By securing the opening of the grain corridor we confirmed again Turkey’s key role in solving global problems,” Erdogan said on Saturday.

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Kuwait’s New Doctrine

The Arab Gulf STates Institute in Washington
URL: https://agsiw.org/kuwaits-new-doctrine/
August 15, 2022
 

Kuwait’s “new doctrine” has the potential to usher in a new era. It can either lead to radical change for the better, further decay, or entrenchment of the deadlocked status quo.

 

Bader Al-SaifAug 15, 2022

Kuwaiti Emir Nawaf al-Ahmad al-Sabah attends the Gulf Cooperation Council summit in Al-Ula, Saudi Arabia, January 5, 2021. (Bandar Algaloud/Courtesy of Saudi Royal Court/Handout via REUTERS)

Bader Al-Saif
Non-Resident Fellow, AGSIW; Assistant Professor of History, Kuwait University
 

The emir and crown prince of Kuwait will soon mark two years in power with freshly minted institutions: a new prime minister and government along with a prospective Parliament and attorney general. These measures are the outcome of Emir Nawaf al-Ahmed al-Sabah’s speech in June – delivered by Crown Prince Meshal al-Ahmed al-Jaber al-Sabah. The speech ushered in a new doctrine: one thus far marked by a “system pause” that however does not preclude “forceful measures.”
The June speech contained many firsts. The emir affirmed his resolute adherence to the constitution in a very detailed manner outlining various ways it could be contravened, all of which he asserted he would not resort to. Second, the emir committed not to interfere in the upcoming elections, including that of the speaker of parliament. Third, the emir highlighted his role above the three branches, stressing that the direct management of the country is relegated to the executive and legislative branches. Fourth, he openly critiqued the government. Fifth, the emir framed the dissolution of Parliament as a decision he made at the people’s request. Finally, and most important, the speech contained a veiled reference to “forceful measures” if there is a “return to what we were in” in reference to the events of the past few years.
The overarching theme of the speech was “correcting Kuwait’s political path,” a phrase that frequently appeared in the speech. But can this path be set without radical reforms initiated by the leadership? And if standoff and stagnation continue after elections, will there be a temptation and rationale set for “forceful measures” that could take Kuwait off its constitutional bearings?
A Strategic “System Pause”?
Kuwait is a constitutional monarchy that defies politics as usual. A site of contentious politics that has fallen prey to itself, Kuwait uneasily blends elements of presidential and parliamentary systems in a region unaccustomed to either.
The turnover to a new national leadership in 2020 was an opportunity for a reset. But operating under the same manual – one largely devised by the late emir – was a tempting interim step with elections around the corner. Instead of the December 2020 election results dictating the direction of leadership positions, both the prime minister and speaker of parliament remained in position. Yet they were at odds with an increasingly growing parliamentary opposition. That colored the tense events of 2021.
While the executive and legislative branches engaged in their usual bickering, the new leadership was quietly working out elements of its transition. New personnel came first following a mass departure of the late emir’s appointees and induction of new faces across the royal courts. A second noticeable transition moment was the emir’s endorsement of a national dialogue and his subsequent granting of a calculated amnesty for 36 individuals. More was expected from the dialogue, but no breakthrough was forthcoming largely due to its implementation by the same political class that instigated the tensions. The attempt to broker a compromise, therefore, did not result in a fundamental change in the country’s volatile environment.
Notwithstanding this missed opportunity, the move gave some breathing space for the country and its political class. This divides 2021, the emir’s first full year in power, into two contrasting periods. The unprecedented escalation of the first six months was met by a stark de-escalatory trend during the latter part of 2021. But reverting to business as usual in 2022 was inevitable because neither an inclusive dialogue nor total amnesty were forthcoming and root causes of tensions were not addressed.
The repeat mode (government formation, interpellations, government resignation) may have also frustrated the country’s incoming leadership, spurring the rise of its new doctrine starting with an elongated pause in the system: a government and Parliament in limbo since the government’s resignation in early April. Intended or not, the “pause” is a new intervention in a system hostage to an addictive repeat mode. The pause strategy serves multiple ends and can be read in different ways. Opposition members of parliament viewed the pause as an assault on the constitution and a precursor to suspending some of its clauses. This led a majority of the members of parliament to participate in a well-calculated sit-in protest in Parliament and host heavily attended lectures at their diwaniyas across the five electoral districts.
Another view of the pause was relayed in the June speech: It gave the leadership the opportunity to “pause, contemplate, and reconsider,” leading to the formulation of its doctrine. The pause also attempted to break the political system’s addictive cyclicality. In contrast to the late emir’s frequent recourse to parliament dissolutions and prompt naming of prime ministers and other officials, the pause comes at the other end of the spectrum. The leadership employed patience as a political tool in the hopes it would defuse tensions and provide breathing space for all parties to remember and internalize the intended purposes of Kuwait’s political order as embodied in the constitution. The new leadership tolerated the slow formation of four governments under its watch in less than two years but did not readily revert to dissolution, even if it meant – for now – adopting a third way that neither ignores nor readily implements the letter of the constitution.
Several commentaries claimed the June speech ended the associated tensions. But the speech did not break the pause. It instead rationalized it and even offered a roadmap, revealing a new doctrine in the making characterized by two paths: “pause” and “forceful measures.”
A “System Reset” Through Radical Reforms
A pause in itself is insufficient to renew Kuwait. This was implicitly recognized in the speech – it framed the next elections as a last chance to avoid the status quo before the regime resorts to “forceful measures.” The political system, the malpractices of the past, and the ensuing culture are more prone to reproducing conflict (the status quo) than conciliation. Unaccompanied by a system overhaul and drastic reforms, asking people to “choose wisely” in the next elections is an invitation to repeat mode. It is not because the people are not aware of the challenges confronting them – they are, especially the youth majority. But the system does not give them the bandwidth to operate freely in light of restrictive electoral laws, shrinking freedoms of expression, and multiple identities competing with the national one.
A call for national unity is politically correct but devoid of meaning without firm government policies that uphold and advance it. Decades of mismanagement and imprudent policies cannot be eradicated in time for an election cycle in less than six weeks. That is why the speech is possibly setting the stage for a system reset if conflict resurfaces after the inauguration of the next government and Parliament. The return of tensions would culminate an elongated pause that has largely characterized the past two years.
The new government can do a lot during the pause phase to avert a move to “forceful measures.” It should champion radical reforms like repealing laws that restrict freedoms; pursuing an administrative overhaul by abolishing the civil service bureau and upending employment in the public sector; reorienting the wealth distribution mechanism with equitable rent distribution via stocks, not salaries; uprooting leadership, especially at the undersecretary and assistant undersecretary levels; entrusting youth with sensitive files; seeking a general amnesty from the emir for politically motivated cases; reinstating the 2006 electoral law while paving the way for comprehensive electoral law reform that regulates political parties; liberalizing lands and initiating speedy construction; abolishing the tenders law and kafala system; and, most important, reformulating the nationality law to resolve citizenship issues regarding the bidun population. Such urgent policy initiatives should be forcefully lobbied at Parliament and transparently executed by an agile, capable, and harmonious government team.
What the incoming Parliament can do meanwhile is shun the personalization of politics, work on a realistic reform program, and heed the emir’s plea for cooperation with the executive branch. This can translate into different behaviors, such as avoiding the early interpellation of the new prime minister. But the Parliament can only do that if there is a willing partner on the other side of the aisle – a capable statesman envisioning and advancing a new Kuwait.
The Temptation of “Forceful Measures”
Being cautiously hopeful is necessary given Kuwait’s instability and inertia. But precedent, the festering of old school thinking, and the limitations of Kuwait’s political system suggest that the executive branch will not deliver what is needed in time, and Parliament will not easily forgo its oversight powers. That would mean an end to the pause phase and the return of the status quo: paralysis, inept government, and a rowdy Parliament. Kuwait would then witness the second route of the new doctrine – the “forceful measures” – alluded to in the June speech. The reset would avoid a senseless repeat mode and come after exhausting the pause strategy.
One possible reading of “forceful measures” is resorting to martial law (or Article 69 of the constitution). Martial law has been declared twice: in 1967 for seven months amid the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and in 1991 for three months following liberation from Iraq. The constitution does not specify the types of emergencies that might call for martial law, leaving it to law no. 22 of 1967. Four of the five scenarios justifying martial law relate to security or external threats. Article 1 notably includes a fifth scenario: domestic unrest. Therefore, martial law in the coming months is not farfetched if tensions resurface, and Kuwait’s repeat mode is back in motion.
Article 69 stipulates parliamentary approval for this move within 15 days if in session or at its first meeting thereafter. Meanwhile, Article 181 safeguards the Parliament from martial law in that the government cannot dissolve Parliament after declaring martial law. But Parliament can be dissolved right before declaring martial law and the suspension of certain clauses of the constitution then enter into effect based on the powers vested under martial law per Article 181. That means two months of martial law could pass without parliamentary oversight until elections take place per Article 107. Any variation of this scenario is possible, and it depends on duration and choice of suspended clauses.
If this takes place without discussion with Parliament and civil society and absent a clear roadmap featuring radical reform during the martial law phase, the move will likely cause discontent among the population. These scenarios are hypothetical in the absence of a clear directive on the issue but demonstrate the significance of the June speech for what it clearly states and, more important, what it merely implies.
Hope and Dread Await New Era in Kuwait
Kuwait’s “new doctrine” has the potential to usher in a new era. It can lead to radical change for the better, further decay, or entrenchment of the deadlocked status quo. The stakes are high for Kuwait and advocates of representative politics in the region.

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Election schedule delays ministerial meeting

Worldakkam
August 16, 2022
URL: https://worldakkam.com/election-schedule-delays-ministerial-meeting/874251/

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Kuwait: Monday’s ministerial meeting to discuss issues including preparations for national parliamentary elections will most likely be postponed until Wednesday. Legal consultants, former parliamentarians, and other officials have suggested that the government’s process for setting these schedules is likely to be accepted by the government as an electoral appeal to the Constitutional Court regarding the results of the elections scheduled for late September. and as a result the results may be rejected,” a source told the Kuwait Times.
“On the other hand, another way of looking at it is that there are new areas that are still out of the electoral schedule that should be included in the nearest electoral districts according to their geographical location, so the government has made it a matter of urgency to meet electoral needs. It’s just that the matter needs to be resolved,” the source said.
The government will hold a meeting to designate specific election dates from September 24th to October 1st, as elections must be held within two months of the dissolution of parliament. If elections are not held by October 2, the constitution will allow the previous parliament to resume as is.
“The Council of Ministers will hold a meeting to schedule a date for accepting the National Assembly’s candidacy request. A source told the Kuwait Times.

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Kuwait extends bid deadline for two oil deals

16 AUGUST 2022BY WIL CRISP 
  MEED
URL:  https://www.meed.com/two-oil-sector-contracts-delayed-in-kuwait

 
Contract scopes include substations and the supply of sulphuric acid

Two contracts tendered by state-owned oil companies in Kuwait have been delayed amid an ongoing political deadlock in the country.
The scope of one of the contracts includes the construction of two new 132KV substations and 33 power lines in North Kuwait.
The bid deadline for this contract, which has been tendered by state-owned upstream operator Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), has been postponed from 4 September to 16 October, according to Kuwait’s Central Agency for Public Tenders (CAPT).
KOC is a subsidiary of the country’s national oil company, Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC).
The second tender that has been delayed was tendered directly by KPC, and its scope covers the supply of sulphuric acid to refineries operated by its downstream subsidiary, Kuwait National Petroleum Company (KNPC).
The closing date for bid submissions on this contract has been postponed from 25 August to 8 September.
Significant delays
Many projects and contracts in Kuwait’s oil and gas sector have seen significant delays over the past three years.
Ongoing political issues in the country, which have included a standoff between the government and the elected parliament that has hindered fiscal reform, contributed to this.
Earlier this month, Kuwait formally dissolved parliament as the Gulf Arab state’s crown prince moved to resolve the standoff.
Parliamentary elections are now expected in October.
Parliament has yet to approve the state budget and, under current plans, the budget for the fiscal year 2022/23 will be approved after the elections.

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NA completes four parliamentary years

Sat, 13 Aug 2022, 11:34 PM

URL: https://www.app.com.pk/national/na-completes-four-parliamentary-years/

NA completes four parliamentary years 

ISLAMABAD, Aug 13 (APP): The 15th National Assembly on Saturday completed four parliamentary years on conclusion of 8th sitting of 44th session which was also marked by Diamond Jubilee Celebrations of legislature in connection with 75th Independence Day.
The 15th National Assembly sworn in on August 13, 2018 and it completed four parliamentary years which comprised a total of 44 sessions. During these years, a total of 357 sittings were held which also included the joint sittings and Presidential Address to Majlis-e-Shoora (Parliament).
During the first parliamentary year, a total of 96 sittings were held followed by 89 sittings in 2nd parliamentary year, 80 in third parliamentary year and 91 in 4th Parliamentary year. According to the website of National Assembly, the House passed 155 legislative proposals while 42 bills were passed in joint sittings of Parliament.
The lower house (National Assembly) relied on ordinances for legislation and a total of 75 ordinances were presented in the House. It is to mention that Diamond Jubilee celebrations in connection with 75th Independence Day were also held before completion of four parliamentary years.
Several functions were planned by the National Assembly Secretariat to commemorate the event in a befitting manner.
August 11 carried a unique significance in the parliamentary history of Pakistan since the inaugural session of the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan was held on this day before the transfer of power from the British rule to Pakistan from August 11 to 14, 1947.
The theme of the celebrations was “Mera Parliman Rahbar-i-Taraqqi-o-Kamal”. The celebrations commenced on August 10 with the inauguration of a three -day photographs exhibition with the theme “Tarjuman-i-Mazi Shan-i-Hal”. A minorities convention was held on August 11 on the eve of the International Day for Minorities to acknowledge the services of minorities in the development of Pakistan. A mega parliamentary convention was on August 13 with the theme “Sayah-i-Khuda-i-Zuljalal”. This convention signified the importance of continuity of democratic system in the country.
Sitting and former parliamentarians attended the convention. Diamond jubilee memorial medals titled “Parliament at 75” were conferred on prominent parliamentarians. The Parliament House was illuminated and fireworks were also arranged on the occasion

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Voters’ role key

Mon, 15 Aug 2022
GDNOnline
URL:  https://www.gdnonline.com/Details/1139936

 
(Reuters Photo)

CITIZENS have been urged to ensure that the right representatives are elected at the parliamentary and municipal elections that are scheduled to be held later this year. Participants at a symposium, Parliament Under Pressure: Developments and Challenges, highlighted the importance of awareness among the electorate .

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Ministry of Culture holds workshop to promote reading and writing among girls

August 14 2022 11:51 PM

QATAR
Gulf Times
URL: https://www.gulf-times.com/story/722664/Ministry-of-Culture-holds-workshop-to-promote-read

The Ministry of Culture, represented by the Qatari Publishers and Distributors Forum, has organised a workshop to promote reading and writing skills among young girls.
The workshop, held within the activities of the “Reading is Life” programme, was presented by Children’s Literature Centre manager Asma al-Kuwari and Amna Abu Qarja, events officer at the forum.
Qarja said that the workshop is aimed at encouraging girls to read and write.
The workshop will continue until tomorrow, when the activities of the “Reading is Life” programme conclude.
The workshop is part of numerous programmes and projects supported by the Ministry of Culture with the aim of promoting reading among girls and highlighting their prospective role in forming the future.
The workshop is held in co-operation with the Al-Khor Girls Centre of the Ministry of Sports and Youth and the Qatar Charity Centre for Community, in partnership with the Children’s Literature Centre.

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