Tag: Qatar

  • US: Qatar, Turkey sponsoring radical ideology

    US national security adviser HR McMaster condemned Qatar and Turkey for taking on a “new role” as the main sponsors and sources of funding for extremist Islamist ideology that targets western interests.

    “Radical Islamist ideology is a grave threat to all civilised people,” Gen McMaster said.

    The US national security adviser said this threat has been identified “myopically” in the past.

    “We didn’t pay enough attention to how it’s [radical Islamist ideology] being advanced through charities, madrassas and other social organisations.”

    While Gen McMaster made reference to Saudi Arabia’s support for some of these organisations decades ago, he singled out Qatar and Turkey as main supporters at present. “[It] is now done more by Qatar, and by Turkey,” he said.

    He claimed Turkey’s growing problems with the West were largely a result of the rise of the Justice and Development Party, to which president Recep Tayyip Erdogan belongs.

    In a rare public policy appearance with his British counterpart Mark Sedwill at an event hosted by the Policy Exchange think tank in Washington, Gen McMaster revealed that US president Donald Trump will roll out his latest national security strategy on Monday.

    Four “vital national interests” would be prioritised. These are protecting the homeland and American people, advancing American prosperity, preserving peace through strength, and advancing American influence.

    Appointed to lead the National Security Agency in February, Gen McMaster said the approach would contest three big threats to US interests globally. Two of these have had a major impact on the Middle East.

    China and Russia are viewed by the White House “as revisionist powers” encroaching on US allies and undermining the international order. Another tier of danger was described as rogue regimes, such as Iran and North Korea, which “support terror and are seeking weapons of mass destruction”.

  • Qatar must stop ‘supporting terrorism’ before World Cup, says UAE

    Qatar should not host the 2022 World Cup unless it changes it policies “supporting extremism and terrorism,” a United Arab Emirates (UAE) minister said on Tuesday.

    UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Anwar Gargash gave this warning amid the latest attack on Doha in a four-month long dispute in the region.

    He said that hosting the World Cup should not be tainted by “support of extremist individuals” and organisations or “terrorist figures.”

    “Qatar’s hosting of World Cup 2022 should include a repudiation of policies supporting extremism and terrorism. Doha should review its record,” Gargash said.

    The UAE is one of four countries which severed its diplomatic and transportation links with Qatar on June 5.

    Along with Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt, it accuses Doha of supporting and funding terrorists, a charge that Qatar has repeatedly denied.

    The controversial Qatar World Cup will take place Nov. 21-Dec. 18 in 2022.

  • Qatar: Nigeria calls for lift of blockade

    Qatar: Nigeria calls for lift of blockade

    Nigeria has called for the Saudi-led blockade of Qatar to be lifted saying it is against such extreme measures that cause hardship.

    Foreign minister Geoffrey Onyeama said his country had come under pressure from both sides to support them in the dispute.

    Read: Four Arab states send 13 demands to Qatar

    But it had decided that the blockade, now about to enter its fourth month, was ‘not the way to go’.

    Nigeria’s call for an end to the row came after other African countries opted to either to stay neutral or bow to Saudi pressure by calling back their ambassadors from Doha.

    Senegal, Chad, Mauritania, Eritrea and Niger all cut off diplomatic relations with Doha following the announcement of the blockade in early June.

    But in North Africa Saudi Arabia’s search for support has failed with Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya opting not to take sides.

    Observers said these regimes viewed the quartet coalition – Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE and Egypt – as a threat to regional security and moved to strike a balance with the weaker player, Qatar.

    Apart from Nigeria, Somalia is the only country to take a defiant stance.

    Not only did the Mogadishu government refuse to break off relations with Qatar, but it also continued to allow Qatari planes to fly through its airspace, despite protestations from Riyadh.

    In  June the quartet launched a diplomatic and transport blockade accusing Qatar of cosying up to Iran and supporting terrorism in the region, which Qatar denied.

    The move has led to Qatar importing food from Turkey and Iran as well as flying in milk from the UK.

    It also caused mixed-nationality families to be split up as Qataris found themselves kicked out of the boycotting countries who recalled their own citizens under threat of having their passports taken away.

    Among the more extreme demands was the closure of the Doha-based TV network, Al-Jazeera.

    Mr Onyeama took issue with the main planks of the Saudi case against Qatar – Al-Jazeera, Iran and terrorism.

    He said: ‘As a country we don’t have an issue with Al-Jazeera. We have a policy in this country of freedom of information. We don’t really believe as a government in interfering with the media.

    ‘As of now there’s nothing that has been brought to the attention of the Nigerian government showing definitively that Al-Jazeera is promoting terrorism.

    ‘To call for the shutting down of a station, especially one with such a profile as Al-Jazeera, we haven’t seen anything to lead us to believe that this is the way to go.’

    On Tehran, Mr Onyeama disagreed with the quartet’s view that Iran was a pariah state who should be shunned in the region.

    Qatar recently came under fierce criticism for restoring diplomatic relations with Tehran, and Iran’s foreign minister visited Doha today (Tues).

    ‘Iran is a member of the United Nations,’ he said. ‘Most countries have diplomatic relations with Iran, so doing so does not to our minds mean you are supportive of terrorism’.

    He also called out threats made to Qatar over its support for Muslim Brotherhood which the Saudi-led alliance also claimed supports terrorism.

    Mr Onyeama added: ‘ However distasteful it might appear to some, the Muslim Brotherhood were a recognised government in Egypt at one time, voted in democratically, so the fact is that at some point there might have been engagement between Qatar and a democratic party when they were a democratic government in Egypt.’

    He said Nigeria has not seen any evidence to support a blockade of Qatar and, on that basis, it should be called off because it was only causing hardship.

    ‘The measures that have been taken are very extreme. Maybe they just don’t like Qatar doing its own thing, but that’s for them to say.

    ‘We feel that the hardship that’s caused to ordinary Qataris and others is most unfortunate and our position has been that we would invite them to an international forum where they talk to each other. The air blockade, and things like that, is a bit extreme.

    ‘Qatar is a very small country and the alliance against it is much bigger and there is tremendous pressure being exerted.

    ‘But they are brothers, more or less, the Gulf states. There must be some other way of sorting out their issues.’

     

  • Qatar calls for conflict to settle migration issues

    Qatar calls for conflict to settle migration issues

    Qatar says the best way to resolve the issues of refugees and migration is to eliminate the major causes that forced those to leave their home countries, Qatar news agency( QNA ) reported on Friday.

    Qatar’s Ambassador to Lebanon, Ali Al-Marri, stated this in Doha in his speech at the opening session of the regional consultative meeting on international migration.

    Al-Marri said that factors responsible for migration are conflicts, marginalisation, economic and social weaknesses as well as instability.

    He said that Qatar would continue to support the efforts made by the UN Economic and Social Commission for West Asia ( ESCWA ) and others to reach global consensus on the issue of refugees for the benefit of the international community.

    Others are the Arab League and International Organisation for Migration ( IOM ).

    Eighteen Arab countries make up ESCWA and it is aimed at promoting economic and social development in western Asia through regional and sub-regional cooperation and integration.

    NAN

  • Buhari’s integrity is unimpeachable – Onyeama

    Buhari’s integrity is unimpeachable – Onyeama

    Mr Geoffrey Onyeama, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, has described the integrity of President Muhammadu Buhari as unimpeachable and remained intact in the fight against corruption.

    Onyeama told the Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in New York that the amount of money siphoned out of the country was staggering.

    According to him, however, the Federal Government has been engaging countries where the money was stashed away for repatriation.

    “President Muhammadu Buhari is known as a crusader against corruption; his integrity in unimpeachable.

    “The high level of corruption has played a direct role in the development deficit in the country.

    “We know that corruption fights but it’s a fight this government intends to fight to the end.

    “We will require global cooperation to facilitate restitution and repatriation of those funds. Corruption is an impediment to development,” the Minister said.

    Onyeama said Switzerland had repatriated about $1 billion in looted funds to Nigeria while high-level discussions were ongoing with Britain, Qatar, the U.S. and a host of other countries.

    He explained that corruption was endemic and was not going to be won overnight, stressing that the Federal Government was determined to block financial leakages in the system.

    The minister added that Buhari had also made it clear that there would be no immunity for high-profile corrupt individuals, adding that the Whistle Blowers’ policy was working.

    According to him, the Federal Government has the records of all the money recovered from proceeds of corruption and that the money would be channelled to appropriate projects that impact on the people.

    He, however, said government was yet to ‘name and shame’ those from whom looted money was recovered so as not to discourage restitution.

    Onyeama said Africa was blessed with various human and natural resources but that the enabling environments needed to be created for the continent to realise its full potentials.

    The Minister also said that majority of Nigerians were hard working and honest people who were found in every country in the world.

    On the reported skirmishes on the Bakassi Peninsula, Onyeama said there were no fewer than four million Nigerians in Cameroon, adding that Nigeria-Cameroon relations was cordial.

    He also disclosed that Nigeria was calling for the reform of the UN Security Council to reflect the current realities.

    According to him, Nigeria is pushing for two permanent members’ seats for Africa on the Council, adding that Nigeria was ready to serve Africa in that capacity.

    The theme for the UN General Assembly is: ‘Focusing on People: Striving for Peace and a Decent Life for All on a Sustainable Planet’, holding from Sept. 19 to 25.

  • UAE minister denies hacking of Qatari websites

    UAE minister denies hacking of Qatari websites

    The United Arab Emirates was not responsible for an alleged hack of Qatari websites which helped spark a month-long diplomatic rift with Doha, the UAE’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs said on Monday.

    Speaking at a forum in London, Anwar Gargash said the UAE would not escalate its boycott by asking companies to choose between doing business with it or with Qatar.

    Vodafone Qatar, an affiliate of Vodafone Group had said that access to its network was being affected by technical issues.

    “The company is working to resolve the issue,’’ Vodafone Qatar said on its official Twitter account.

    Several Vodafone customers told Reuters that they were unable to make or receive phone calls.

    A spokesman for Vodafone Qatar did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    State-controlled Ooredoo also serves Qatar’s mobile communications market.

    Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain cut diplomatic and transport ties with Qatar on June 5, accusing it of supporting terrorism, a claim which Qatar denies.

  • Qatar not worried about suspension from GCC – Foreign minister

    Qatar not worried about suspension from GCC – Foreign minister

    Qatar is not worried that its membership in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) will be suspended as its rival neighbours threaten to escalate their sanctions against Doha.

    “No, they cannot take such a decision because it should be by consensus,” Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed Abdulrahman said during a meeting at the Chatham House think tank in London.

    He was referring to the six-member political and economic alliance in the Gulf, which includes Kuwait and Oman, who have taken a neutral stance since the crisis began a month ago.

    Three members of the GCC, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, along with Egypt cut diplomatic and transportation links with Qatar in June.

    Since then, Kuwait has been mediating the crisis.

    The media reports that Qatar faces further isolation and possible expulsion from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) if its response to a list of demands made nearly two weeks ago is not satisfactory.

    Saudi Arabia, the United Arab emirates, Egypt and Bahrain foreign ministers are due to meet in Cairo to discuss Qatar’s reply to 13 demands they sent to Qatar in return for the lifting of sanctions imposed in June.

    The dispute revolves around allegations that Qatar supports Islamist militants, including the Muslim Brotherhood, which has been designated a terrorist organisation by Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Egypt.

    Qatar denies it supports terrorism and says Arab countries want to control its foreign policy.

    Abdulrahman had said at a joint news conference with his German counterpart on Tuesday that its response was “given in goodwill and good initiative for a constructive solution.

    However, he insisted that Doha would not compromise on its sovereignty.

    Gulf officials have said the demands are not negotiable, signaling more sanctions are possible, including “parting ways” with Doha a suggestion it may be ejected from the GCC, a regional economic and security cooperation body founded in 1981.

    “Qatar is walking alone in its dreams and illusions, far away from its Gulf Arab brothers, after it sold every brother and friend and bought the treacherous and the one far away at the highest price.

    “A Gulf national may be obliged to prepare psychologically for his Gulf to be without Qatar,” the editor of the Abu Dhabi government linked al-Ittihad newspaper wrote in an editorial said.

    Some newspapers said that remarks by Abdulrahman in which he stressed his country would not compromise on its sovereignty suggests that Doha would not change its policies.

  • Qatar : We are still awaiting response to demands- UAE

    Qatar : We are still awaiting response to demands- UAE

    United Arab Emirates foreign minister Abdullah Al-Nahayan said on Tuesday that Arab countries boycotting Qatar over its alleged support for terrorism were still awaiting a response to their demands via mediator Kuwait.

    “I think it is premature to talk about extra sanctions … this depends on what we will hear from our brothers in Kuwait,” Al-Nahayan said at a press conference with his German counterpart in Abu Dhabi.

    Asked about any further sanctions, Al-Nahayan advised caution.

    “I think it is premature to talk about the extra sanctions and steps and procedures to be taken by these countries.

    “This depends on what we will hear from our brothers in Kuwait and the dialogue and conversations among ourselves and the examination of these responses,” he said.

    NAN reports that Qatar said it delivered its response on Monday to the list of demands issued by Arab countries that cut diplomatic ties with Doha after the Arab allies agreed to extend their deadline by 48 hours.

    Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed Al-Thani met Kuwaiti Emir Sabah al-Ahmed and handed him a written letter by Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad with Doha’s response, the Kuwaiti news agency reported.

    Kuwait has been acting as a mediator to resolve the crisis which began in early June when Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain and Egypt severed their relations with their small Gulf neighbour.

    Al-Thani arrived in Kuwait, hours after the four Arab allies agreed to a 48-hour deadline extension proposed by Kuwait.

    The foreign ministers of Egypt, the UAE, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia are scheduled to meet in Cairo on Wednesday to discuss “future steps” in dealing with Qatar.

    Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said during a press conference with German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel in Jeddah that Saudi Arabia and its allies have long had concerns about Qatari policies that are harmful to the world and have not seen much effort to reverse those stances.

    “”The aim is to change Qatar’s policies, which we believe harm Qatar, the region and the world.

    ““The latest diplomatic dispute was not the first,’’ al-Jubeir added.

    He noted that agreements signed in 2013 and 2014 designed to get Qatar to stop supporting terrorist powers.

    ““The Qataris have made some progress, but certainly not sufficient progress to be satisfactory,’’ he said.

    Gabriel said he was doing his best to stay neutral in the matter, though he noted the different countries would take advantage of the crisis to work out a joint policy against terrorism.

    ““It should be possible that the financing of extremist and terrorist organisations in the region can be stopped,’’ Gabriel said, noting that, in his view, the best outcome of the crisis would be a “a joint agreement” against support for terrorism.

    Al-Jubeir said he had yet to see the Qatari response handed to Kuwait.

    ““We look forward to receiving the response. We hope the response is positive so we can reach a satisfactory solution to the crisis,’’ he said.

    In June, the Arab countries severed diplomatic ties and transportation links with Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism, a charge that Doha denies.

    Later, the four countries placed on terrorism lists 59 figures and 12 groups with alleged links to Qatar.

    Doha has called the boycott a “siege” and “collective punishment.”

    Qatar disclosed a list of 13 demands issued by the four countries, which included downgrading ties with Iran, a regional rival of Saudi Arabia; stopping support for Islamist groups; and shutting down the Doha-based broadcaster Al Jazeera and its channels.

    In 2014, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain temporarily withdrew their ambassadors from Qatar, accusing it of breaching a regional security pact.

    However that dispute was resolved through Kuwait’s mediation.

  • Qatar: Arab countries extend deadline by 48 hours

    Qatar: Arab countries extend deadline by 48 hours

    Four Arab countries have agreed to give Qatar 48 more hours, in a deadline extension proposed by Kuwait, for the Gulf emirate to comply with a list of demands, local media reported early Monday.

    Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain and Egypt agreed to extend the deadline after Kuwait’s government urged them to do so late Sunday, the Kuwait News Agency reported.

    Earlier, as the original deadline expired, Saudi-owned television Al Arabiya reported that Qatar could be hit by further sanctions from the countries that have cut ties with the Gulf emirate over its alleged support for terrorism.

    Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Egypt were “studying” a list of potential political and economic sanctions against Qatar after it rejected the list of demands, Al Arabiya said.

    The Dubai-based broadcaster said that one possible punishment would be suspending Qatar from the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), a U.S.-allied bloc.

    The GCC comprises Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait and Oman.

    Potential trade penalties against Qatar could be extended to include countries and companies dealing with the energy-rich emirate, Al Arabiya added without elaborating.

    The foreign ministers of Egypt, the UAE, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia will meet in Cairo on Wednesday to discuss “future steps” in dealing with Qatar, a spokesman for the Egyptian Foreign Ministry said late Sunday.

    On Friday, Qatar disclosed a list of 13 demands issued by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Egypt.

    The demands were conveyed by Kuwait which is acting as a mediator in an attempt to defuse the ongoing dispute.

    The demands include downgrading ties with Iran, a regional rival of Saudi Arabia; stopping support for Islamist groups, and shutting down the Doha-based broadcaster Al Jazeera and its channels.

    Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed Al-Thani is due to deliver his country’s official reply on the demands to Kuwait’s Emir Sabah Al Ahmed on Monday, according to Al Arabiya.

    There was no immediate confirmation from either Qatar or Kuwait.

    Mohammed had earlier said the demands violated his country’s sovereignty but called for dialogue.

    Meanwhile, President Donald Trump, who initially claimed credit for sparking the rift between the Gulf nations, spoke separately with Saudi Arabia’s King Salman Al-Saud, Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim Hamad and Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince Mohammed Al-Nahyan.

    The president “underscored that unity in the region is critical … to defeating terrorism and promoting regional stability,” the White House said in a statement.

    “President Trump, nevertheless, believes that the overriding objective of his initiative is the cessation of funding for terrorism,” it continued.

    In June, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Egypt severed diplomatic ties and transportation links with Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism, a charge that Doha denies.

    Later, the four countries placed on terrorism lists 59 figures and 12 groups with alleged links to Qatar.

    Doha has called the boycott a “siege” and “collective punishment.”

    In 2014, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain temporarily withdrew their ambassadors from Qatar, accusing it of breaching a regional security pact.

    That dispute was resolved through Kuwait’s mediation.

  • Demand for Qatar to close down al-Jazeera ‘unacceptable’ – UN

    Demand for Qatar to close down al-Jazeera ‘unacceptable’ – UN

    The UN says the demand by Saudi Arabia and three other Arab nations for Qatar to close down its al-Jazeera TV channel is an “unacceptable attack” on the right to freedoms of expression and opinion.

    Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt imposed a boycott on Qatar on June 5, accusing it of backing militants, then issued an ultimatum, including demands it shut down a Turkish military base in Doha, shutting Al Jazeera and curbing ties with Iran.

    UN High Commissioner is “extremely concerned by the demand that Qatar close down the Al Jazeera network, as well as other affiliated media outlets”, his spokesman Rupert Colville told a news briefing.

    Al Jazeera

    “Whether or not you watch it, like it, or agree with its editorial standpoints, Al Jazeera’s Arabic and English channels are legitimate, and have many millions of viewers.

    “The demand that they be summarily closed down is, in our view, an unacceptable attack on the right to freedom of expression and opinion,” Colville said.

    NAN reports that on June 24, the four Arab states handed the country a list of 13 demands, including some likely to infuriate Doha and exacerbate the region’s worst crisis in decades.

    Some of the key demands include shut down the Al Jazeera media network and its affiliates, halt the development of a Turkish military base in the country and reduce diplomatic ties with Iran.

    Others are cut ties to extremist organisations, stop interfering in the four countries’ affairs, stop the practice of giving Qatari nationality to citizens of the four countries.