Bou Abdel Aziz… aren’t we deserve an apology?

First of all, I would like to congratulate His Highness the Prime Minister, Sheikh Ahmad Al-Nawaf Al-Sabah, for being assigned to the presidency of the Council of Ministers and forming the third government. We all pray to Allah to help and guide you in that responsibility. As for our friends, the members of the National Assembly, I do not want any of them to feel bad, as the shows and stances of some of them have become a source of entertainment and amusement for the citizens. Indeed, whoever led the political scene was able, without any effort, to put you in the offside detection box, whereas the potentials and goals of some of you appeared to everyone. Six months ago, I wrote an article entitled "Ahmed Al-Saadoun’s Equation," in which it states, "First of all, dear Bou Abdel Aziz, you were among the first to raise the banner of boycotting the one-vote elections, and you were one of the engines of what was called "the series of dignity of a homeland and call for demonstrations." Some people may have been misled by your opinions and speeches, so they violated the law, and harsh sentences were issued against them. All of this affected the extent of our evaluation of your opinions. But to apply for candidacy according to the one-vote system, allow me to say: "It is too much. I do not know how you want to justify this matter to the citizens. You are the one who said and declared in more than one medium your rejection of the one-vote system, and you warned against it in the strongest terms. The honorable readers can go back to the archives of newspapers and YouTube to see, hear, and read, and this is only a way to refresh our memory. Well, now that you've changed your mind, don't you see that Kuwaiti society has the right to hear from you about why you changed your mind? What had happened? It is possible to be convinced. I add and wonder why, when the government did not attend the sessions during the previous councils, in which the session was adjourned based on previous regulations and custom, our friends known as "deputies of the council podium," even those of the Ph.D. bearers who "blackened the situation," objected to that decision. Of course, their objection was not taken seriously. But your statement, Bou Abdel Aziz, on one of the channels, in which you approved the validity of holding the sessions in the absence of the government, tipped the scales, and many citizens believed this opinion. How not, and you are the constitutional symbol, and your opinion is, as it is said "trusted". Well, the question now is: what has changed? You are the head of the National Assembly, and the government has been absent from the scene, and your deputies among the ministers joined their government and were absent too. The important question for you is: Why did not you hold the sessions without the presence of the government? Why did you not give a health excuse and leave the matter to your deputy? The Kuwaiti people want an answer, and you, Bou Abdelaziz, have unfortunately turned your back on them. And let's change the topic of the sessions. There's a more important question: Are you satisfied with what we hear of violations that may have been committed in the transfer, delegation, and assignment of electoral personnel to their children and grandchildren? The source of the leaks circulating on social media is not known, nor is it known if they are real or fabricated, and everyone from the government and parliament is silent, leaving the citizens in the dark. Let us also turn from transportation, delegation, and intermediaries to discuss the statements of some deputies and the decision of the Human Resources Committee to cancel the decision of the Minister of Awqaf regarding the working hours of the memorization centers of the Holy Qur’an. We were surprised by the chairman of the committee with the number of centers, which amounted to 195 centers, and the huge number of employees, amounting to 35 thousand as reported. If we divide them by the number of centers, each center will have 180 teachers and administrators. But your friends among the deputies did not ask about the number of classes and the number of students, so now we know and the picture becomes clearer. Dear Bouabdaziz, do you think, from the constitutional point of view, from the point of view of justice, as well as from the legal point of view, that these actions are permissible? Would you agree to attack a minister who enforced the law? Especially since it has been proven by numbers that there are those who receive a salary but do not work? Of course, this case applies to all state agencies and their workers; Bou Abdelaziz, if you do not stand up and say a word of truth with courage and stop this absurdity that is taking place on the part of some parliamentarians and some ministers, then who will do that? To whom is the blame directed? Personally, I hope to annul this council so that you can preserve what remains of your great legacy. Forgive me, Bou Abdelaziz, for you are a symbol. Our expectations and hopes were, and still great. There is room for you to set things right and take it upon yourself to fix what no one else could fix. Otherwise, you owe Kuwait a true apology.
Stay Safe.



