Officials in Kuwait have released results from Saturday’s parliamentary elections showing that the Shi’ite minority lost more than half their seats, while liberals made slight gains.
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The final results, released early Sunday, showed the Shi’ite candidates winning just eight seats in the 50-member parliament, compared to the 17 they held since last December’s election.
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The election was the second in eight months, called to replace the legislative body elected in December after a court ruled in June that the earlier ballot was flawed.
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The mainly Islamist and populist opposition boycotted the poll after Kuwait’s emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, reduced the number of votes each citizen could cast in parliamentary elections from four to one.
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Opposition groups said this favors supporters of the Western-backed emir and would prevent the opposition from gaining a parliamentary majority.
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Supporters say the measure is designed to prevent political stalemates.
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The political system in oil-rich Kuwait is the most open in the Gulf but the ruling al-Sabah family controls all key government posts. [Read More]
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Source: VOA News: Economy and Finance
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