Human rights in Kuwait

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Kuwait

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Kuwait



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Human rights in Kuwait are mixed. Whereas male Kuwaiti nationals enjoy a moderate range of rights, there are severe allegations of human rights abuses among foreign nationals and women. Kuwait uses the death penalty for serious crimes like murder and drug trafficking. Freedom of the press is also restricted.

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[edit] Treaties

Kuwait is a party to several international human rights treaties, including[1]

[edit] Women

Until recently, the right to vote was not extended to women. Starting in the parliamentary elections in 2006, women were allowed to vote, though there was low turnout[2]. Despite this change, women are still treated as inferior in law and society. As of 2001, the Personal Status Law puts women under men in marriage, inheritance and testimony in court[3] Legally, married women are mostly subservient to their husbands and lack independence in several areas, giving women virtually no power in everything from divorce to freedom of movement[4].

[edit] Foreign nationals

Individuals of foreign descent who live permanently in Kuwait, or bidun, have severely limited rights. Until recently, it was nearly impossible to gain citizenship, and it is still limited. Bidun who fail to gain citizenship or register as foreigners face the threat of deportation. According to a report by Human Rights Watch, "Kuwait severely restricted their rights to leave and return to Kuwait, to marry and found a family, and to work, and their children's rights to education, to be registered immediately after birth, and to acquire a nationality."[3] After the Gulf War of 1990-1991, Kuwait expelled more than 400,000 Palestinian refugees (after the PLO allied itself with Iraq during its invasion of Kuwait). Guest workers also encounter several human rights abuses, and the right to organize a labor union is limited[4].

[edit] Press

In 2005, Kuwait ranked 85th in the Reporters Without Borders world survey of the freedom of the press[5]. According to the 2004 full report, Kuwait ranks among the most free countries in the Middle East for the press, but there is still widespread self-censorship of local and foreign press, and certain subjects are understood to be taboo[6].

[edit] References

[edit] External links