Emir Sheikh Nawaf al-Ahmad al-Sabah tasked the Parliament speaker, the prime minister and the head of the supreme judicial council to recommend the conditions and terms of the amnesty ahead of it being issued by decree, Sheikh Nawaf's office said.
The statement by the emir’s office said the amnesty would cover “some Kuwaitis sentenced in past cases” but gave no further details. It said some 40 MPs had called for the amnesty, Reuters reported.
The stand-off between the government and the elected Parliament had paralyzed legislative work, hindering efforts to boost state finances and enact measures including a debt law making it possible to tap global markets, a government priority.
Although Kuwait does not permit political parties, it has given its elected legislature more influence than similar bodies in other Persian Gulf monarchies, including the power to pass and block laws, question ministers and submit no-confidence votes against senior government officials.
That gives citizens more say over how the country is run than in neighboring autocracies, though the emir has final say in state matters. But deadlocks between the cabinet and assembly have over decades led to government reshuffles and dissolutions of Parliament, sometimes hampering investment and reform.