|
cities kuwait city
Kuwait City has a population
191,000 (1991), is the capital of the emirate of Kuwait and
part of the Al-Asimah goveronate. Locally it is informally
known as "The City". It contains the Majlis Al-Umma
(Kuwait's parliament), most Governmental offices, the
headquarters of most Kuwaiti corporations and banks, and the
Kuwait Towers.

Kuwait City's trade and transportation needs are served by
Kuwait International Airport, Mina Al-Shuwaik (Shuwaik Port) and
50 kilometers to the south by the port of Mina al-Ahmadi (Ahmadi
Port) on the Persian Gulf coast.
The city was invaded and seized by Iraqi forces in the 1991 Gulf
War. Under Iraqi occupation it was renamed Saddam City in honor
of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. It returned to its original name
once Iraqi troops were expelled.
History of Kuwait
The headland now occupied by
Kuwait City was settled only 300 years ago. In the early 18th
century, Kuwait was nothing more than a few tents clustered
around a storehouse-cum-fort. Eventually the families living
around the fort divided among themselves the responsibilities
attached to the new settlement. The Al-Sabah family, whose
descendants now rule Kuwait, were appointed to handle local law
and order. The small settlement grew quickly. By 1760, when the
town's first wall was built, Kuwait's dhow fleet was reckoned to
be 800 and its camel caravans travelled regularly to Baghdad and
Damascus.
By the early 19th century,
Kuwait was a thriving trading port. But trouble was always,
literally, just over the horizon. It was often unclear whether
Kuwait was part of the Ottoman Empire or not, though official
Kuwaiti history is adamant that the sheikhdom was always
independent of the Ottomans. During the second half of the 19th
century, the Kuwaitis generally got on well with the Ottomans.
They skilfully managed to avoid being absorbed into the empire
as the Turks sought to solidify their control of eastern Arabia
(then known as Al-Hasa). They did, however, agree to take the
role of provincial governors of Al-Hasa.

That decision led to the rise
of the pivotal figure in the history of modern Kuwait: Sheikh
Mubarak al-Sabah al-Sabah, commonly known as Mubarak the Great,
who reigned from 1896 to 1915. Mubarak was deeply suspicious of
Turkey and was convinced that Constantinople planned to annexe
Kuwait. He overthrew and murdered his brother, the emir, did
away with another brother and installed himself as ruler. In
1899 Mubarak signed an agreement with Britain: in exchange for
the British navy's protection, he promised not to give away
territory to, take support from or negotiate with any other
foreign power without British consent. Britain's motive for
signing the treaty was a desire to keep Germany, then the main
ally and financial backer of Turkey, out of the Gulf. The
Ottomans continued to claim sovereignty over Kuwait, but they
were now in no position to enforce it.
Modern History
Kuwait spent the early 1920s
fighting off the army commanded by Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman
Al-Saud, the founder of modern Saudi Arabia. In 1923 the
fighting ended with a British-brokered treaty. As a result, an
oil concession was granted in 1934 to a US-British joint venture
known as the Kuwait Oil Company (KOC). The first wells were sunk
in 1936, and by 1938 it was obvious that Kuwait was virtually
floating on oil. The outbreak of WWII forced the KOC to suspend
operations, but when oil exports took off after the war so did
Kuwait's economy. As the country became wealthy, health care,
education and the general standard of living improved
dramatically.

On 19 June 1961, Kuwait became
an independent state. Elections for the first National Assembly
were held the following year. Although representatives of the
country's leading merchant families won the bulk of the seats,
radicals had a toehold in the government from its inception. In
August 1976, the cabinet resigned, claiming the assembly had
made day-to-day governance impossible. The emir suspended the
constitution, dissolved the assembly and asked the crown prince
(who, by tradition, also serves as prime minister) to form a new
cabinet. New elections were not held until 1981, but the
assembly's new majority proved just as troublesome as the last
and parliament was dissolved again in 1986.
Despite political and economic
tensions, by mid-1990 the country's (and the Gulf's) economic
prospects looked bright, particularly when the eight-year
Iran-Iraq war ended. So it came as a shock when on 16 July 1990
Iraq sent a letter to the secretary-general of the Arab League
accusing Kuwait of exceeding its OPEC quota and of stealing oil
from the Iraqi portion of an oil field straddling the border.
Iraqi president Saddam Hussein threatened military action. Over
the next two weeks a series of envoys bent over backwards to
offer Iraq a graceful way out of the dispute. But it was to no
avail: Iraqi tanks were in Kuwait City before dawn on 2 August,
and by noon they had reached the Saudi frontier. The emir and
his cabinet fled to Saudi Arabia.
The United Nations quickly
passed a series of resolutions calling on Iraq to withdraw from
Kuwait. The Iraqis responded with the claim that they had been
invited in by a group of Kuwaiti rebels who had overthrown the
emir. On 8 August Iraq annexed the emirate. Western countries,
led by the US, began to enforce a UN embargo on trade with Iraq,
and in the months that followed more than half a million foreign
troops flooded into Saudi Arabia.

At the end of November, the US
and the UK secured a UN resolution authorising the use of force
to drive Iraq out of Kuwait if the Iraqis did not leave
voluntarily before 15 January 1991. The deadline passed, the
Iraqis didn't budge and within hours waves of Allied (mostly US)
aircraft began a five-week bombing campaign of Iraq and Kuwait.
The ground offensive, when it finally came, was something of an
anticlimax: Iraq's army disintegrated in a mere 100 hours. At
the end of February, Allied forces arrived in a Kuwait City
choked by clouds of acrid black smoke from the hundreds of oil
wells the Iraqis had torched as they retreated.
The government set about not
simply rebuilding Kuwait, but rebuilding it exactly as it had
been before the invasion. Meanwhile, a heated debate began over
the country's political future. In keeping with a promise the
opposition had extracted from the emir during the occupation,
elections for a new National Assembly took place in October
1992. The opposition shocked the government by winning over 30
of the new parliament's 50 seats, and opposition MPs secured six
of the 16 seats in the Cabinet, though the Al-Sabah family
retained control of the key defence, foreign affairs and
interior ministries. By the second anniversary of the invasion,
Kuwait had largely succeeded in erasing the physical scars of
war and occupation, although tensions with Iraq remained high.

In 1994, Kuwait convicted
several Iraqis on charges of attempting to assassinate former US
president George Bush when he visited the emirate the previous
year. The plot, according to the Kuwaitis, was uncovered and
foiled at the last minute.
Recent History
Today, many resources are being
used to remove land mines and clean up environmental damage left
over from the Iraqi retreat, subsidised by the UN to the tune of
US$5.9 billion. Ten percent of oil revenues are, by law, put
into a trust to prepare for the day that Kuwait's massive oil
reserves dry up. Also on the political agenda are women's
rights: in May 1999, the Emir decreed that women would for the
first time be able to vote and run for office in the 2003
general elections, subject to approval by the parliament. It was
not approved. That same year saw Kuwait hit the world's centre
stage once again, when great numbers of mainly US and British
troops gathered in the emirate in readiness for the invasion of
Iraq. As a result, pro-Islamic groups gained ground in
parliamentary elections later that same year.
|