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Time has come to reconsider the laws regulating development: Al-Shariaan

Minister of Commerce and Industry and former Minister of Community Affairs and Development Fahd Al-Shariaan believes that the time has come to reconsider the laws regulating development, and that the documentary cycle in Kuwait is sterile and stands between the need for decision and the flexibility of its decision-making.

Al-Shariaan says in a series of interviews conducted by Al-Rai daily regarding the issues that have recently emerged and were the subject of political and populist disputes, that buying loans at random violates the justice of the view of citizens, and that if there are greedy merchants in Kuwait, then there is a valid majority, and that the relationship between the government and merchants needs to be defined more to be its parliamentary and popular vision is clearer.

Al-Shariaan argues for the importance of reviewing the salaries of leaders without entering into an exception, and that the withdrawal from the “generations” must be a borrowing, while pointing out that privatization achieves development goals at the highest standards and at the lowest cost, and that all applied housing experiences reflected the shared responsibility between the government and the people.

And he says: “I do not support the abolition of (the Chamber) as one of the important entities in the state, but I prefer that it be under the umbrella of a government institution, just as the lack of an extensive study of the demographics makes the state enter a professional labor deficit, and the government is not responsible for the fate of the political situation without the representatives, but there is always a missing link in the cabinet that you cannot know unless you are inside it.

Al-Shariaan indicated that transforming Kuwait into a financial and commercial center in the region requires faith, vision and harnessing capabilities and that providing the appropriate environment to curb corruption is the duty of those who lead the government.

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