AFP/Kuwait City
Ten Kuwaiti opposition lawmakers yesterday filed a motion of “non-cooperation” with the prime minister in a bid to oust him over ties with Iran, speaker Jassem al-Khorafi said.

Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Mohamed al-Ahmed al-Sabah waves as he leaves the National Assembly in Kuwait City yesterday
The motion was submitted at the end of a seven-hour grilling in a secret parliamentary session over allegations the premier boosted ties with Shia Iran at the expense of relations with Arab states in the Gulf.
The motion against Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Mohamed al-Ahmed al-Sabah will be voted in a secret session on June 23.
If passed, the issue will be referred to the emir who will either dissolve parliament and call for fresh election or dismiss the prime minister and appoint a new one.
The premier was accused of harming national security by favouring ties with Iran over Gulf Arab states.
The MPs accuse Sheikh Nasser of damaging ties with Kuwait’s partners in the Gulf Co-operation Council by failing to promptly dispatch troops as part of the GCC force to Bahrain to help crush Shia-led protests in the kingdom.
They also criticised the prime minister for allowing a visit by Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi last month which followed statements from Tehran which many in the Gulf found provocative.
The session of parliament comes amid heightened sectarian tensions between the emirate’s Shia minority and the Sunni majority over regional issues.
It was demanded by Sunni Islamist MPs Mohamed Hayef and Waleed al-Tabtabai, and independent lawmaker Mubarak al-Waalan, all of whom are staunchly opposed to Iran.
In March, a Kuwaiti court sentenced two Iranians and a Kuwaiti to death and two others to life in prison after convicting them of forming a spy ring operating for Iran’s Guards. Tehran denied the charges.
The two nations returned their ambassadors to their respective capitals last month after a tit-for-tat expulsion of diplomats.
Sheikh Nasser, 71, has been fighting non-stop political disputes with opposition in parliament and some members of his cabinet and the ruling family.
On Monday, the emir accepted the resignation of deputy premier Sheikh Ahmed Fahad al-Sabah, who quit over a dispute with the prime minister.
Opposition MPs campaigning to oust the prime minister plan to file demands to quiz him soon, if the current bid fails.
The non-cooperation motion requires 25 votes in the 50-member house to pass.
MP Tabtabai said the opposition has guaranteed the support of 18 MPs so far and the number is likely to rise.
Pro-government MP Yussef al-Zalzalah told reporters the answers of the prime minister were “excellent backed by numbers and figures,” while opposition MP Saifi al-Saifi said he was not convinced with the premier’s replies.