Kuwait's former defence minister receives jail sentence 

Kuwait's constitutional court in Kuwait City. (Kuwait News Agency)
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Updated 26 November 2023
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Kuwait's former defence minister receives jail sentence 

  • Sheikh Jaber and Sheikh Khalid were acquitted of embezzlement charges in March 2022 but the case was revived upon an appeal from the Kuwaiti prosecution

DUBAI: Kuwait's highest court on Sunday sentenced former defence and interior minister Sheikh Khalid Al-Jarrah Al-Sabah to seven years in prison with hard labor for mishandling military funds, Kuwaiti paper Al-Qabas reported.  

Former Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah, who faced similar charges, was ordered by the court to return the funds he mismanaged. 

Both men had denied the charges. 

Sheikh Jaber had in 2019 resigned as prime minister, a post he had held since 2011, after lawmakers sought a no-confidence vote against Sheikh Khalid, who was interior minister at the time. 

The then defence minister Sheikh Nasser Sabah al-Ahmed had issued a statement two days after the government resignation, saying the cabinet stood down to avoid addressing mismanagement of some 240 million dinars ($778.61 million) in military funds before he assumed office. 

Sheikh Jaber and Sheikh Khalid were acquitted of embezzlement charges in March 2022 but the case was revived upon an appeal from the Kuwaiti prosecution.


UN urges Middle East warring parties to ‘give peace a chance’

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UN urges Middle East warring parties to ‘give peace a chance’

  • The United Nations rights chief called on Friday for cool heads to prevail in the Middle East and urged the warring sides to pull back and give peace a chance
GENEVA: The United Nations rights chief called on Friday for cool heads to prevail in the Middle East and urged the warring sides to pull back and give peace a chance.
“The world urgently needs to see steps to contain and extinguish this blaze — but instead we are only seeing more inflammatory, bellicose rhetoric, more bombings, more destruction, killings and escalation, that fuels it further,” Volker Turk told reporters.
“I urge the states involved to take immediate steps to de-escalate, to give peace a chance. And on other states to call clearly on those involved to pull back. Cool heads must prevail if we are to prevent further terror and devastation for civilians.”