Over 100 people hurt as Kuwait police battle protesters
KUWAIT: Around 100 protesters and 11 policemen were hurt on
Sunday as Kuwaiti riot police used tear gas and rubber bullets in
clashes with tens of thousands of demonstrators, witnesses and officials
said. “The number of wounded protesters in hospital has exceeded 100
after riot police attacked them,” director of the Kuwait Society for
Human Rights Mohammad al-Humaidi said on his Twitter account.
The interior ministry said in a statement that 11 policemen were
wounded after protesters threw rocks on them, adding that police only
acted after protesters became violent.
Former opposition MP Abdullah al-Barghash told AFP he saw injured men
being taken to hospital in ambulances.
Dozens of protesters were also arrested, some of them after they were
beaten up in one of the most violent protests in Kuwait. Those arrested
include former Islamist MP Waleed al-Tabtabai.
Barghash and other activists put the number of protesters at more
than 100,000, which would be the largest gathering in the history of the
Gulf state, but independent onlookers estimated the crowd at more than
30,000. Police made no estimate.
“The way demonstrators were dealt with is unprecedented in Kuwait,”
Barghash said as he led several hundred protesters, some wearing orange
straps to signify the call for change.
Organisers of the “Dignity of a Nation” demonstration announced on
its Twitter account the end of the procession more than three hours
after it started.
Former Islamist MP Jamaan al-Harbash declared a victory for the
people and a defeat for the regime and “these protests will not stop
until the nation restores its dignity”.
The opposition called the demonstration to protest against a decision
by Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah to amend the electoral law.
Activists claim the change is aimed at electing a rubber-stamp
parliament.
“The people want to abolish the decree,” chanted the protesters
marching in the street which was blocked by riot police.
The demonstrators were due to march on the Seif Palace which houses
offices for the emir, crown prince and prime minister, but were
prevented by police.
Organisers later asked protesters to gather at an alternative site in
the capital where demonstrators cut off the country’s key seaside
Arabian Gulf Road for several hours.
Masked police in full riot gear repeatedly fired tear gas and sound
bombs and later used rubber bullets to disperse the crowds led by former
opposition MPs.
“It looks like a battlefield,” Mohammad Rashed, a private sector
employee, told AFP as he left the scene, accompanied by his wife and
other relatives.
As the clashes took place, the emir received members of the Al-Sabah
ruling family, in power for over 250 years, who reiterated their loyalty
to him, official news agency KUNA reported.
The protest was called by the Islamist and nationalist-led opposition
in protest at a the emir’s decision to amend the electoral law, despite
it having been confirmed by a court last month.
The opposition, which has decided to boycott polls called for
December 1, said amending the electoral law amounted to a coup against
the constitution.
In the latest clampdown on opposition leaders and activists, the
public prosecution service issued an arrest warrant for a member of the
scrapped 2012 parliament, Osama al-Munawer.
Munawer joins three former opposition MPs who have been in detention
since Thursday. The prosecution on Sunday extended their detention by 10
days, according to Al-Humaidi al-Subaie, one of their defence lawyers.
Political tension has strongly impacted the Kuwait Stock Exchange
which shed 3.05 percent at the start of the business week on Sunday, the
biggest single day loss in more than three years. The wrangling in the
OPEC member has stalled development despite abundant oil-driven
surpluses of more than $400 billion.
AFP |