KUWAIT CITY: Voters arrive at a polling station during parliamentary elections in Kuwait on Tuesday.—AFP
KUWAIT CITY: Voters arrive at a polling station during parliamentary elections in Kuwait on Tuesday.—AFP

KUWAIT CITY: Polls opened on Tuesday in Kuwait’s seventh general election in just over a decade, following repeated political crises that have undermined parliament and stalled reforms.

More than 793,000 eligible voters have the chance to determine the make-up of the 50-seat legislature in the only Gulf Arab state to have an elected parliament with powers to hold government to account.

Voters queued outside in the sweltering summer heat, many of them dressed in traditional thob gowns.

“I came to perform my patriotic duty and I am hopeful that things will get better,” Maasoumah Bousafar, 64 said after casting her ballot.

Kuwait’s emir, Nawaf al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, called the vote last month after he had again dissolved parliament amid a persistent deadlock with the executive branch that has deterred investment and impeded growth.

A total of 207 candidates are running for a four-year term as lawmakers, the lowest number in a general election since 1996. They include opposition figures and 13 women.

All but three of the 50 members of parliament who won in 2022 are seeking re-election.

Despite widespread frustration with the political elite, human rights activist Hadeel Buqrais said it was still important to cast a ballot.

“This is the only place where I have a voice, and boycotting means giving up my right as a citizen,” she said.

“I have to participate, even if I do not expect the new parliament to tackle issues” concerning the country’s human rights record, Buqrais said.

Since Kuwait adopted a parliamentary system in 1962, the legislature has been dissolved around a dozen times.

Published in Dawn, June 7th, 2023

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