Every area in Kuwait has a jam3iya. Not a shop. A small economy.
The main market where the family does its week. The branch shops through the blocks, close enough to walk to at night. The khabaaz. The garden strip and the parking. And the rented units around it: the pharmacy, the laundry, the tailor, the 7alaq, the نخي و باجيلا, the restaurant that changes its name every three years.
All of it belongs to the people who live there. You bought shares in your jam3iya. You elect its board from your neighbours. You get a return at the end of the year on what you spent. It buys from suppliers, employs hundreds, signs contracts, rents out those shops, and spends money on your area in your name.
It is not the government’s. It is not a company’s. It is yours.
And for years, some of the people you elected have been treating it as theirs.
The problem.
Money taken. Jobs handed out to build a voting bloc for the next election. Tenders to a friend. A supplier chosen because he is known, not because he is cheaper. Products on the shelf because someone was paid to put them there. Free boxes from suppliers that belonged to the members and went into a car boot instead. A shop rented at a price that helps a cousin and not the area.
تنفيع.
Everyone knows the word. Everyone has heard the stories. Almost nobody could ever prove one.
And here is what gets forgotten. You are not a customer who is owed a receipt. You are an owner. An owner’s right to know has no floor and no ceiling.
No line is too small. What did your jam3iya pay for the bagger’s uniform, and who sold it to us, and was there a cheaper price? Who prints the flyers? Who supplies the bags?
No line is too big. What does the manager take home? What bonus was approved, by whom, and against what result? Who signed it?
And the questions in the middle decide everything. How was that cashier hired? An open competition, or a phone call from someone’s cousin? What housing does your jam3iya pay for its workers, at what rent, from which landlord, and in what condition? That is your money. It is your name on the door.
None of this is secret because it is sensitive. It is unseen because nobody ever built a way to look.
That is the disease, under all of it. Every item on that list is a decision taken in a room the owners cannot see into.
The evidence.
Four things, and none of them is a rumour.
The prosecutions. Two years of them. Hundreds of board members and employees referred to the Public Prosecution. Referred, not convicted. That difference matters, and the courts will decide it. But look at what they were referred for. Supply contracts. Free goods that never reached the shelf. Shops rented under the price. Hiring. Every category on the list above, confirmed by the state.
The suspensions. Boards dissolved. Temporary directors sent to run the market at the end of your street. Then in February 2025, elections suspended across the sector. The state looked at the elected system and switched it off.
The new regulation. July 2026. A hundred and twenty-two articles forcing into the light exactly what was in the dark. Published tenders. Suppliers’ free goods written into the accounts. Outside auditors. You do not write that unless you know what has been happening. Every article is a confession about the old system.
And the fourth. Say you want to check any of it today. Where do you go?
There is no website. No bulletin. No assembly, because the elections are suspended. No inbox that must reply.
The state spent two years proving the disease exists, then built a window to stop it. The owners still cannot see through the glass.
Who else had this problem.
Britain and Ukraine. Institutions owned by the public or by their members, where the people inside handed out the contracts, the jobs and the money to people they knew, and the owners outside had no way to see it.
In Britain, the country’s largest cooperative, the same idea as a jam3iya, was run by a board of elected amateurs who bought things they did not understand and lost billions. An official review called it manifestly dysfunctional. Members owned it and learned about it from the news.
In Ukraine, before 2015, public money went out in contracts arranged in advance between officials and companies they knew. The same disease as تنفيع, at national scale, worth billions a year.
What they did.
Ukraine built two things and never mixed them up.
First the window. A national platform, ProZorro, publishing every public contract, on one rule: everyone sees everything.
Then, three months later, the readers. A second organisation, DoZorro, teaching ordinary citizens how to read a contract, how to spot a rotten one, and how to file a complaint that had to be answered. They did not wait for a public to gather. They gathered one. Twenty-four local organisations. Over 350 training sessions. Twenty thousand people taught.
And before any of it, they built the inbox: an official channel into the state audit body, because complaints from citizens had been treated as unofficial and went nowhere.
Within three years, citizens reading contracts had flagged violations across thirty thousand tenders, and 4,700 of the worst were cancelled or rewritten. Contracts killed by people reading, not by police arriving. By then the method was written into the law.
Kuwait is prosecuting. Ukraine did the other half, and that is the half that stops the next one.
Britain is the warning. It fixed the governance and talked to its members: a review, a new rule book, the biggest member consultation in its history, a hundred million pounds spent cutting prices. What it never built was a permanent way for members to see inside. Three years later the customers were back. The voters were not. Election turnout went from 3.6 percent to 4.7 percent.
Communication rebuilds shopping loyalty far better than it rebuilds voting. So this plan does not ask for turnout. It asks for three hundred people who read.
We diverge here to Finland for one reason. It never got sick, and it is the only case that tells us why.
Same idea as a jam3iya. A shop owned by the people around it, boards elected by neighbours. It should have caught everything Kuwait caught. It didn’t. Not because Finns are honest. Because its members are awake, by two decisions, held for thirty years.
The value comes to you. A card that pays cash into your account every month, spendable anywhere. You never have to believe you are an owner. You are reminded, with money.
And the news arrives in the same hand as the money.
The result: about a quarter of members vote in board elections, in a cooperative covering 84 percent of Finnish households. Compare America’s largest consumer cooperative, REI. Twenty-three million members, turnout in the low single digits, because the board controls who can stand and nothing reaches anyone.
Same idea. One difference. Whether the information finds the member, or the member has to find it.
Britain shows what happens after the theft. Ukraine shows how to catch it. Finland shows what we actually want. A jam3iya where stealing was never convenient, because too many owners were already watching.
What Kuwait needs to do.
Six things. None needs a new law.
1. Decide who answers questions, before anything is published. Write down where a member’s question goes, who must reply, and within how many days. Name one person responsible for member communication, and one channel where the jam3iya’s news is published.
Having that means a member who notices something has somewhere to send it, and someone who must answer. It turns a complaint from a rumour in the queue into a document with a date on it. Ukraine skipped this and citizens’ reports went nowhere for years.
2. Send the information out. Do not wait for members to look for it. A monthly bulletin by SMS and WhatsApp to every member. The same bulletin printed at the door of the main market and every branch. In it: the audit summary, every contract signed that month with the supplier’s name and the amount, and the date of the next members’ meeting the moment there is one.
Having that puts the name of every supplier in front of thousands of neighbours every month. Someone will recognise a name. Someone will know the real price. A board that knows the whole area reads the contract next week chooses differently from a board that knows nobody reads it.
3. Publish each contract in plain Arabic, on one page. What was bought. From which supplier. For how much. What the other offers were. Who approved it.
Having that makes comparison possible. The number that matters is not the winning price. It is the price next to it. When a member can see a cheaper offer was refused, and who refused it, تنفيع stops being a suspicion and becomes a question with a name on it.
4. Teach members how the jam3iya works, and how to read its accounts. Two hours, one evening a month, at the branch, open to anyone. Three hundred trained members in the first year, and again every year after. Start with what most owners were never told: what the board can decide and what it cannot, what the yearly members’ meeting is for, where your annual return comes from. Then the numbers. And teach them the list of free goods, not only the contracts. Suppliers give the jam3iya free boxes and discounts to win its business. Those belong to you. The list is where they are written down, and if nobody reads it, that is the easiest place for a gift to become a bribe.
Having that gives the jam3iya three hundred people checking the books who are not paid, cannot be transferred, and shop there every week. The ministry sends its own inspectors, and last year it referred 85 of them for investigation. A member cannot be moved to another department. He lives next to the shop.
5. Ask members before decisions, not after. One survey per year. Publish the questions first so people can criticise them. Publish every answer within sixty days, including the ones that make the board look bad. Then twice a year publish قلتم / فعلنا: what members asked for, what was done, and what was not done and why.
Having that settles the argument every jam3iya has. What the members actually want, in numbers, instead of what the loudest man in the diwaniya says they want. And it leaves a record. A board that ignores a published request has to explain itself in writing, and the writing stays on the wall until the next election.
6. Write the crisis statements now. Before they are needed, for the four things that will happen: a corruption accusation, a food recall, a viral video, a dissolved board. One spokesperson only. Every first statement says five things. What we know. What we do not know. What we did in the first hour. Who is investigating. When we speak again. If you do not know something, say you do not know. Tell the staff before the public.
Having that protects the jam3iya on the day its board fails, and in this sector some will. The building is not the men accused. If the first voice is the jam3iya’s own, saying plainly what happened, the shop stays open, the shares stay safe, and the members keep their institution while the accused go to court. If the first voice is a rumour, the area loses trust in a market it owns and will still own long after the trial ends.
The point.
The whole plan is people, and the thing that binds them. Communication. Nothing else.
The word is already in the name. تعاون. Cooperation. That is what a جمعية تعاونية is supposed to be. What has been running instead is a جمعية نفع خاص, a private-benefit society. And look at the root. نفع. The same نفع sitting inside تنفيع. The word for the disease was hiding inside the word for the institution the whole time.
You do not put the تعاون back by decree. You put it back by dialogue. Open, constant, dialogue. A bulletin that arrives. A contract anyone can read. A question that must be answered. That is all the six steps are.
It does not fix the margin, the administration, or the suppliers. But the research is clear on the order. Awake members produce better boards, and better boards produce a better jam3iya. Not the reverse. So the plan does not fix those things. It builds the people who will.
And it needs a leader. Not a manager. Not a committee. Someone born for it, who can stand in a room of angry owners, tell them the truth without flinching, and have them come back next month.
The six steps are written. Anyone can copy them. Only one kind of person can make them mean anything.
Build the thing worth owning. The owners will come.





