
Over 400 Illegal Residents Rounded Up in 9-day Kuwait Crackdown
The arrests were made by the Kuwaiti residency affairs police during a massive security crackdown across the country's six governorates conducted in coordination with relevant authorities over nine days resulting in detaining 440 violators.
The raids covered residential areas, farms, and engineering companies operating in uninhabited areas across the country, a security source has disclosed.
The Kuwaiti Ministry of Interior said the April 30-May 9 campaigns were part of an integrated security plan aimed at controlling irregular workers and exposing illegal residents.
The ministry renewed a warning that its crackdown on illegals is ongoing across the country, and emphasized that violators and their employers will be held accountable.
Kuwait, a country of an overall population of 4.9 million people mostly foreigners, is seeking to redress its demographic imbalance and regulate the labour market.
Authorities there have recently mounted a nationwide crackdown on illegal foreign residents, who failed to take advantage of a three-month grace period to rectify their status. Thousands have since been rounded up.
The amnesty, which commenced in March last year, allowed illegal expatriates to readjust their residency status or leave willingly the country without paying fines.
During the grace period, irregular expatriates, who had no passports, were able to leave Kuwait without having to pay a fine and are allowed to re-enter the country.
A new residency law, which went into effect in Kuwait in January incorporating reconciliation and payment of fines by violators, does not apply to expatriates who failed to heed the amnesty deadline.
The new law licenses foreigners for regular residency for a period not exceeding five years, 10 years for real estate owners, and 15 years for investors.
The code also sets a foreigner's temporary stay at three months with possible extension for a period not exceeding one year.
Violating the temporary or regular residency or iqama rules is punishable by one year imprisonment and a fine of up to KD 1,200 (around $3,900).
Violating the visit residency rules is punishable by one year in prison and a maximum fine of KD2,000 dinars.
Also read: Kuwait Convicts Nine In One Of Its Deadliest Labour Tragedies

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Gulf Insider
18 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
Bahrain: Multiple Arrests Made In Major Narcotics Seizure Operation
Several individuals of various nationalities, aged between 20 and 49, were arrested in separate cases for attempting to smuggle and possess approximately 14 kilograms of narcotics, with an estimated street value of over BD24,000. Carried out by the Anti-Narcotics Directorate at the General Directorate of Criminal Investigation and Forensic Science, in cooperation with Customs Affairs, the arrest was part of the directorate's ongoing security efforts to protect society from the scourge of drugs and enforce the law. The directorate explained that upon receiving information about the incidents, investigations and search operations were conducted, leading to the identification and arrest of the suspects, who were found in possession of the narcotics. Legal measures The seized substances were secured, and the necessary legal measures were taken before referring the cases to the Public Prosecution. The Criminal Media Division reaffirmed the continued activation of community partnership through lectures and exhibitions aimed at drug prevention awareness. It also urged the public to cooperate with security authorities by reporting any information related to drug smuggling or trafficking via the 24-hour hotline 996 or by email at 996@ assuring that all information will be treated with full confidentiality.


Gulf Insider
19 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
Kuwait Uncovers Major Citizenship Fraud By Single Syrian Family
Kuwait has revoked the nationality of 108 people after uncovering an elaborate fraud orchestrated by an extended Syrian family, the Ministry of Interior announced. According to local media reports, the investigation, months in the making, began when a man was stopped while trying to flee through Kuwait International Airport. Under questioning, he admitted he had obtained Kuwaiti nationality illegally and revealed that several of his siblings were in fact his Syrian brothers, all posing as Kuwaitis. At the centre of the scheme, officials say, was a Syrian national who had forged documents to be listed as the father of dozens of others. His civil file eventually ballooned to include 53 names, none of whom had legitimate claims to citizenship. Further digging exposed his brother, who had used marriage records and falsified kinship documents to extend the fake family tree. Together, the brothers built an interlocking network of fraudulent files that spanned generations, marriages and dependents. Using DNA testing, investigators proved there were no biological ties to the Kuwaiti citizens under whose lineage they claimed to belong. The probe, which officials describe as the most sophisticated of its kind, is still widening. Kuwait's Supreme Nationality Investigation Committee is reviewing hundreds of additional cases, and more than 200 Syrians are expected to lose their citizenship in the coming weeks. Kuwait recently revoked the citizenship of more than 1,060 individuals in what is being described as the largest nationality fraud operation in the country's history, following an intensive investigation that uncovered decades-long networks of forged identities and falsified records. The investigation was led by the Supreme Committee for the Investigation of Kuwaiti Nationality, in coordination with the Ministry of Interior's Nationality Investigation Department. The campaign uncovered decades-old fraud networks involving forged identities, false family claims, and dual nationalities.


Gulf Insider
20 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
Kuwait Court Jails Six, Including Police Officers, For Plotting To Frame Citizen On Drug Charges
A criminal court in Kuwait has sentenced six men to 10 years in prison for orchestrating a scheme to frame a citizen on false drug charges, the Al Qabas Arabic daily reported. Presided over by Judge Hamoud Al Shami, the court convicted three officers from the Interior Ministry of falsifying an official report that claimed the victim was in possession of narcotics and psychotropic substances. In addition to their prison sentences, the officers were fined 10,000 Kuwaiti dinars each and dismissed from their positions. In the same case, three other defendants — all stateless residents known locally as Bidoon — were each sentenced to one year in prison. Prosecutors said the men had planted drugs in the victim's vehicle before tipping off patrol officers, who then staged the arrest. The court found that the plan had been pre-arranged between the Bidoon defendants and the police officers. The ruling, which is subject to appeal, highlights the judiciary's firm stance against corruption and the abuse of authority within the country's security services.