Kuwait’s emir approved a new cabinet on Sunday two days after he dissolved the parliament elected only weeks earlier, and he and the new government assumed some of the assembly’s powers.
Sheikh Meshal al-Ahmad al-Jaber Al-Sabah on Friday dissolved the most powerful elected legislature in the Gulf and suspended articles of the constitution, citing “interference” by lawmakers.
The new government – the small emirate’s 46th – is headed by Prime Minister Sheikh Ahmed al-Abdullah Al-Sabah and comprises 13 ministers, two of them women.
The former oil minister was tasked with forming the government last month, two weeks after the now-dissolved National Assembly was elected.
The outgoing premier, Sheikh Mohammad Sabah al-Salem Al-Sabah, had refused to take up the post again amid tensions between the government and the 50-member National Assembly.
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MPs have previously accused ministers of corruption, while the government has accused the legislature of hampering development plans.
Constant wrangling between lawmakers and executive authorities has resulted in a persistent stalemate in the oil-rich Gulf state, delaying much-needed reforms.
The decision to dissolve parliament is his second such move in a reign that is just months old.