Reuters: KUWAIT: Kuwaitis who fight in conflicts abroad
such as Syria or encourage such actions should face up to 30 years in jail, a Kuwaiti lawmaker said
in a proposed law modeled on penalties introduced in Saudi Arabia.
A Saudi
royal decree published last week said any citizen who fought abroad would face from three to 20
years in jail, in an apparent move to deter Saudis from joining rebels in Syria and then posing a
security risk once they return home.
In his proposal, which praised the
Saudi decree, Kuwaiti MP Nabil al-Fadl said civilians should face 5-20 years behind bars. Members of
the National Guard or police could face 10-30 years in jail for fighting abroad or promoting such
actions.
The plan would need the approval of the ruling emir, government
and parliament to become law.
“Over the past two decades, Kuwait has
suffered the loss of its sons in Afghanistan and Chechnya after instigators managed to delude them
and sent them to fight under what they described as religious justifications,” Fadl said in his
proposal, published on the National Assembly’s website Monday.
Kuwait needs
to alter its penal code in the ways suggested in order to maintain the security and safety of the
Gulf, “especially after the emergence of militant groups and currents with purposes far from Islamic
law,” the proposal said.
Saudi Arabia’s Interior Ministry estimates some
1,200 have joined Islamists involved in Syria’s civil war.
The decree
underscores concerns of young Saudis hardened by battle coming home to target the ruling royal
family – as happened after the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Unlike
Saudi Arabia and Qatar, Kuwait has not directly supported the arming of fighters against the
government of Syrian President Bashar Assad and has opted instead to organize humanitarian
aid.
Kuwaiti citizens, however, have used the Gulf state’s more open
political environment to collect money for arming rebel fighters.
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