Kuwait’s finance minister resigns after three months 

The resignation was approved by Ahmed Al-Sadoun, Kuwait’s national assembly speaker. (AFP)
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Updated 13 July 2023
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Kuwait’s finance minister resigns after three months 

  • Manaf Abdulaziz Al-Hajjri was appointed finance minister in April by the prime minister during a cabinet reshuffle
  • Oil Minister Saad Al-Barak has been appointed as acting finance minister

KUWAIT CITY: Kuwait’s Finance Minister Manaf Abdulaziz Al-Hajjri has submitted his resignation after three months in office, according to a report in the local Al-Qabas newspaper.  

The resignation was approved by Ahmed Al-Sadoun, Kuwait’s national assembly speaker during a meeting on Tuesday. 

Al-Hajjri’s resignation was accepted the following day through a decree, which named the country’s oil minister as the acting ffnance minister, state-run news agency KUNA reported.

As per the decree, signed by Crown Prince Sheikh Mishaal Al-Ahmed Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, oil minister and minister of state for economic and investment affairs Saad Al-Barak took up the post.

Al-Hajjri was appointed as finance minister in April by the prime minister during a cabinet reshuffle. 

A general election in September had delivered a mandate for change, bringing 27 new lawmakers to the 50-member assembly. 

However, in March, Kuwait’s Constitutional Court annulled the decree dissolving the previous parliament and reinstated it. 

A few weeks later, the ruling Al-Sabah family dissolved that parliament for a second time, setting up the most recent vote, in which most of the lawmakers elected in September regained their seats.


MSF calls Israeli ban a ‘grave blow’ to Gaza aid

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MSF calls Israeli ban a ‘grave blow’ to Gaza aid

  • Doctors Without Borders is among 37 foreign humanitarian organizations banned from the territory
  • The group, which has hundreds of staff in Gaza, says: 'Denying medical assistance to civilians is unacceptable'
JERUSALEM: International charity Doctors Without Borders Friday condemned a “grave blow to humanitarian aid” after Israel revoked the status it needs to operate in Gaza for refusing to share Palestinian staff lists.
Israel on Thursday confirmed it had banned access to the Gaza Strip to 37 foreign humanitarian organizations for refusing to share lists of their Palestinian employees.
Doctors Without Borders (MSF), which has 1,200 staff members in the Palestinian territories, the majority of them in Gaza, said in a statement that “denying medical assistance to civilians is unacceptable under any circumstances.”
The medical organization argued that it had “legitimate concerns” over new Israeli requirements for foreign NGO registration, specifically the disclosing of personal information about Palestinian staff.
It pointed to the fact that 15 MSF staff had been “killed by Israeli forces,” and that access to any given territory should not be conditional on staff list disclosure.
“Demanding staff lists as a condition for access to territory is an outrageous overreach,” the charity said.
MSF also denounced “the absence of any clarity about how such sensitive data will be used, stored, or shared,” charging that Israeli forces “have killed and wounded hundreds of thousands of civilians” in Gaza during the course of the war.
It also charged that Israel had “manufactured shortages of basic necessities by blocking and delaying the entry of essential goods, including medical supplies.”
Israel controls and regulates all entry points into Gaza, which is surrounded by a wall that began to be built in 2005.
Felipe Ribero, MSF head of mission in the Palestinian territories, told AFP that all of its operations were still ongoing in Gaza.
“We are supposed to leave under 60 days, but we don’t know whether it will be three or 60 days” before Israeli authorities force MSF to leave, he said.
Prominent humanitarian organizations hit by the Israeli ban include the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), World Vision International and Oxfam, according to an Israeli ministry list.
The ban, which came into effect on December 31, 2025 at midnight, has triggered widespread international condemnation.
Israel says the new regulation aims to prevent bodies it accuses of supporting terrorism from operating in the Palestinian territories.
MSF says it currently supports one in five hospital beds in Gaza and assists one in three mothers in the territory, and urged the Israeli authorities to meet to discuss the ban.