السلام عليكم
الإفراج عن معتقلي 'كرامة وطن 5'
صدر قرار ظهر اليوم بالإفراج عن كافة المعتقلين في مسيرة كرامة وطن الخامسة في منطقة قرطبة والذين تصل أعدادهم لنحو 19 معتقلا وذلك مقابل كفالة شخصية لكل منهم، ومن بينهم حمد المطر وأسامة الشاهين.
وكانت القوات الخاصة قد فضت المسيرة بالقوة الأحد الماضي، واعتقلت نحو 70 مواطنا وأفرجت عن بعضهم وأبقت على 19 آخرين قيد الإحتجاز.
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ياتي هذا بعد تنديد امريكي بالقمع كان اخره
وزاره الخارجيه الامريكيه
أخبار حقوق الإنسان@HumanRightsKW
المتحدث باسم الخارجية الأمريكية فيكتوريا نولاند: ندعو الحكومة الكويتية إلى التمسك بما درجت عليه من احترام حرية التجمع وتكوين جمعيات والتعبير
أخبار حقوق الإنسان@HumanRightsKW
رويترز: الخارجية الأمريكية اطلعت على أنباء الحكم على مغردين بتهمة الاساءة لذات الأمير وناقشت المسألة مع الكويت وحثت على احترام حرية التعبير
Fox news فوكس تيوز
Kuwait police fire tear gas on defiant protesters
Published January 06, 2013
Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY – Riot police in Kuwait have fired tear gas and stun grenades to disperse more than 1,000 anti-government protesters, defying strict rules limiting political demonstrations in the Gulf nation.
Kuwaiti authorities have said rallies must receive written permission as part of efforts to quell growing unrest over last month's parliamentary elections.
But organizers of Sunday's protest used social media to mobilize crowds.
Opposition groups have accused Kuwait's ruler of overstepping his powers by changing voting rules that appeared to favor government critics, which span from Islamist factions and pro-reform liberals. They now seek to bring down the new parliament dominated by pro-government lawmakers.
Kuwaiti rights activist Mohammed Al-Humaidi says several protesters were arrested. There were no immediate reports of injuries
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/0...tear-gas-on-defiant-protesters/#ixzz2HOJUBKfY
صحيفه الواشنطن بوست
نفس الخبر
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...d3b490-582e-11e2-b8b2-0d18a64c8dfa_story.html
صحيفه الغارديان
Kuwaiti forces disperse protesters with stun grenades
Several arrests made after latest protest against changes to voting laws enacted in December
Security forces raise their batons at an opposition protester during a demonstration in Kuwait City on Sunday. Photograph: Yasser Al-Zayyat/AFP/Getty Images
Security forces used stun grenades to disperse hundreds of opposition activists trying to stage a march in Kuwait on Sunday and made several arrests.
Protest marches have grown more frequent in the US-allied oil producer since the opposition boycotted a parliamentary election on 1 December over changes to voting laws that they saw as an attempt to favour pro-government candidates.
Witnesses said between 200 and 300 people had barely gathered in an affluent suburb of Kuwait City late on Sunday when security forces ordered them to disperse because their rally was not licensed.
One witness said that when the men and women moved to the middle of the road and began chanting, security forces attacked them with smoke bombs and stun grenades.
The security forces chased the demonstrators into side streets and arrested about 20 people, including a former MP, according to his Twitter account.
"I saw about a dozen people being arrested," one witness said.
An interior ministry spokesman said several "instigators of unrest" had been arrested but that security forces had used only stun grenades.
A long-running power struggle between members of Kuwait's elected parliament and its cabinet, appointed by a prime minister chosen by the emir, has held up reforms, stalled investment and prompted the dissolution of a series of assemblies.
The last, opposition-dominated, parliament collapsed in February. With the opposition boycotting last month's election, the sixth since mid-2006, more than half the 50 politicians in the new national assembly are newcomers to parliamentary politics.
Sunday's protest was the fifth in a series organised by the opposition since the emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, used emergency powers to cut the number of votes per citizen to one from four, saying it would fix a flawed system and ensure security.
Members of Kuwait's disparate opposition groups said the measure would hurt their ability to encourage supporters to cast additional votes for their allies and thus form political relationships in a country that does not allow political parties.
Kuwait has the most open political system in the Gulf Arab region; parliament has legislative powers and can question government ministers over policy.
But the Sabah family, which has ruled Kuwait for more than 250 years, holds the key levers of power, including top portfolios such as the interior, defence and foreign ministries.
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التعليق
نشكر الله ثم شكرا وزاره الخارجيه الامريكيه بسبب تصريحكم تم اطلاق سراح المعتقلين فورا وبدون كفاله ماليه
حكومه الكويت فضيحتكم على مستوى دولي شوفوا صور مقنعينكم على صحف دوليه
هشاتقات بريطانيه بتويتر اشتغلت تندد بالتعسف القضايا
الإفراج عن معتقلي 'كرامة وطن 5'
القوات الخاصة اعتقلت نحو 70 شخصا في مسيرة قرطبة
8/1/2013 الآن - المحرر الأمني 1:44:09 PM
جانب من المعتقلين بعد الإفراج عنهم - تويتر
صدر قرار ظهر اليوم بالإفراج عن كافة المعتقلين في مسيرة كرامة وطن الخامسة في منطقة قرطبة والذين تصل أعدادهم لنحو 19 معتقلا وذلك مقابل كفالة شخصية لكل منهم، ومن بينهم حمد المطر وأسامة الشاهين.
وكانت القوات الخاصة قد فضت المسيرة بالقوة الأحد الماضي، واعتقلت نحو 70 مواطنا وأفرجت عن بعضهم وأبقت على 19 آخرين قيد الإحتجاز.
=======================
ياتي هذا بعد تنديد امريكي بالقمع كان اخره
وزاره الخارجيه الامريكيه
أخبار حقوق الإنسان@HumanRightsKW
المتحدث باسم الخارجية الأمريكية فيكتوريا نولاند: ندعو الحكومة الكويتية إلى التمسك بما درجت عليه من احترام حرية التجمع وتكوين جمعيات والتعبير
أخبار حقوق الإنسان@HumanRightsKW
رويترز: الخارجية الأمريكية اطلعت على أنباء الحكم على مغردين بتهمة الاساءة لذات الأمير وناقشت المسألة مع الكويت وحثت على احترام حرية التعبير
Fox news فوكس تيوز
Kuwait police fire tear gas on defiant protesters
Published January 06, 2013
Associated Press
KUWAIT CITY – Riot police in Kuwait have fired tear gas and stun grenades to disperse more than 1,000 anti-government protesters, defying strict rules limiting political demonstrations in the Gulf nation.
Kuwaiti authorities have said rallies must receive written permission as part of efforts to quell growing unrest over last month's parliamentary elections.
But organizers of Sunday's protest used social media to mobilize crowds.
Opposition groups have accused Kuwait's ruler of overstepping his powers by changing voting rules that appeared to favor government critics, which span from Islamist factions and pro-reform liberals. They now seek to bring down the new parliament dominated by pro-government lawmakers.
Kuwaiti rights activist Mohammed Al-Humaidi says several protesters were arrested. There were no immediate reports of injuries
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/0...tear-gas-on-defiant-protesters/#ixzz2HOJUBKfY
صحيفه الواشنطن بوست
نفس الخبر
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...d3b490-582e-11e2-b8b2-0d18a64c8dfa_story.html
صحيفه الغارديان
Kuwaiti forces disperse protesters with stun grenades
Several arrests made after latest protest against changes to voting laws enacted in December
- Reuters in Kuwait
- guardian.co.uk, Sunday 6 January 2013 21.56 GMT
Security forces used stun grenades to disperse hundreds of opposition activists trying to stage a march in Kuwait on Sunday and made several arrests.
Protest marches have grown more frequent in the US-allied oil producer since the opposition boycotted a parliamentary election on 1 December over changes to voting laws that they saw as an attempt to favour pro-government candidates.
Witnesses said between 200 and 300 people had barely gathered in an affluent suburb of Kuwait City late on Sunday when security forces ordered them to disperse because their rally was not licensed.
One witness said that when the men and women moved to the middle of the road and began chanting, security forces attacked them with smoke bombs and stun grenades.
The security forces chased the demonstrators into side streets and arrested about 20 people, including a former MP, according to his Twitter account.
"I saw about a dozen people being arrested," one witness said.
An interior ministry spokesman said several "instigators of unrest" had been arrested but that security forces had used only stun grenades.
A long-running power struggle between members of Kuwait's elected parliament and its cabinet, appointed by a prime minister chosen by the emir, has held up reforms, stalled investment and prompted the dissolution of a series of assemblies.
The last, opposition-dominated, parliament collapsed in February. With the opposition boycotting last month's election, the sixth since mid-2006, more than half the 50 politicians in the new national assembly are newcomers to parliamentary politics.
Sunday's protest was the fifth in a series organised by the opposition since the emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Sabah, used emergency powers to cut the number of votes per citizen to one from four, saying it would fix a flawed system and ensure security.
Members of Kuwait's disparate opposition groups said the measure would hurt their ability to encourage supporters to cast additional votes for their allies and thus form political relationships in a country that does not allow political parties.
Kuwait has the most open political system in the Gulf Arab region; parliament has legislative powers and can question government ministers over policy.
But the Sabah family, which has ruled Kuwait for more than 250 years, holds the key levers of power, including top portfolios such as the interior, defence and foreign ministries.
==================
التعليق
نشكر الله ثم شكرا وزاره الخارجيه الامريكيه بسبب تصريحكم تم اطلاق سراح المعتقلين فورا وبدون كفاله ماليه
حكومه الكويت فضيحتكم على مستوى دولي شوفوا صور مقنعينكم على صحف دوليه
هشاتقات بريطانيه بتويتر اشتغلت تندد بالتعسف القضايا