November 10, 2012 marked the golden jubilee of Kuwait’s constitution  and the country celebrated it with a spectacular $15-million fireworks  display which earned the wealthy Gulf state a place in the Guinness Book  of World Records.  Tens of thousands of Kuwaitis and expatriates filled  the seaside Arabian Gulf Road to watch the dazzling display of colors  and light that saw a staggering 77,282 fireworks launched over a period  of one hour. The visual presentation marked 50 years to the day since  the late emir Sheikh Abdullah al-Salem al-Sabah announced that Kuwait  had become the first Arab state in the Gulf to issue a constitution and  have a parliament. 
During the past 50 years, parliament was dissolved nine times, six of  them since mid-2006, while some articles of the constitution itself were  frozen twice to suspend parliament for a total of 11 years in the 1970s  and 1980s.
The celebration came as the government and opposition are locked in one  of the worst showdowns in the OPEC member's history, amid accusations by  the opposition that the government has staged a coup against the  constitution.
More than 150 people and 24 policemen were slightly hurt during three  massive demonstrations held by the opposition to protest against the  amendment of the electoral law ordered by the emir last month.
The opposition claims the amendment is in breach of the constitution and  allows the government to influence the outcome of parliamentary polls  slated for December 1.









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