Kuwait's Islamic affairs minister, accused by a senior U.S. official of promoting jihad in Syria, was reported Monday as saying he will stay on after his resignation was rejected.
Al-Qabas daily cited Nayef al-Ajmi as saying he will remain in the post after a request from the "political leadership" following a meeting on Sunday.
The term "political leadership" generally refers to the ruler of the oil-rich Gulf state.
"I will obey the orders of the political leadership and will continue along the same path I have started," Ajmi, who is also justice minister, said.
Ajmi, who strongly denied the U.S. accusations, said on Friday he had tendered his resignation, citing health problems.
The U.S. Treasury under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, David Cohen, charged earlier this year that Ajmi "has a history of promoting jihad in Syria".
His appointment as minister in January was a "step in the wrong direction", Cohen said in a lecture in the United States, parts of which were carried by the Kuwait press last month.
Ajmi said on Friday he was resigning because of health problems predating the U.S. accusation.
He said he had been undergoing tests in London when the reports of Cohen's comments surfaced in the Kuwaiti media, and had cut the tests short to head home.
A statement released after a March 31 cabinet meeting said ministers had followed Cohen's comments "with great attention and displeasure."
Ajmi acknowledged he had taken part in fund-raising campaigns for Syria, but insisted they had been for humanitarian purposes and not for Syria's al-Qaida affiliate Al-Nusra Front as alleged by Cohen.
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