Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Al Jazeera Bans Islamically Incorrect Words

Qatar - Muslim Brotherhood Central - is one of the world's main terror masters. Qatar's broadcaster, Al Jazeera is acting as the Brotherhood's PR arm. Qatar has a hand in every revolution and war in the Middle and Near East, to wit Syria, Egypt, Mali and Libya to name but few. 

UPDATE:



Nov. 19, 2014


Qatar Whistleblower on FIFA Marked For Life


Two whistleblowers who provided information to an investigation into the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bidding process have lodged formal complaints with FIFA, accusing investigators of breaching their confidentiality and misrepresenting their evidence. Phaedra Almajid, a former employee of the Qatar 2022 bid, and Bonita Mersiades, who worked for Australia 2022, agreed to provide information to an investigation headed by US attorney Michael Garcia on the basis that they would be protected. Last week, however, a summary of Garcia’s report published by German judge Hans Joachim Eckert dismissed their evidence as unreliable and inaccurate, and they claim effectively identified them. (Source)



Sep. 21, 2014


Anatomy of Qatar's Funding of Al Qaeda





Sep. 14, 2014

 Qatar Royals Oust Muslim Brotherhood Central


Leaders of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood and allies have announced they are leaving Qatar, having sought refuge there after Mohammed Morsi and his supporters were ousted. Their presence had been a major source of tension in the Middle East, particularly with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which see the brotherhood as a serious threat. The group has been increasingly isolated in recent months. Erdogan: Turkey would welcome Muslim Brotherhood figures who leave Qatar. (Source)



Aug. 28, 2014


Report: Qatar to Fund New Flotilla For Gaza






July 22, 2014


Qatar Resorts To Propaganda Via Front Media



A few weeks ago I was in Vienna where I met a researcher specialising in Muslim Brotherhood affairs. He told me that since they were expelled from power in the Egyptian coup (uprising) of July 2013 their strategy has been to multiply sympathetic news websites, funded almost entirely by Qatar, so as to give the illusion of "multiple sources" for the stories that they want to promote. Recently one of the Qatari funded MB sympathetic websites called Middle East Monitor fabricated a story about the UAE's Foreign Minister meeting the repugnant Israeli terrorist Foreign Minister Lieberman and funding the onslaught on Gaza. This story was then mirrored in the other MB sympathetic new sites such as Arabi21 that Qatar funded before being picked up by the "mainstream" (now sadly discredited) Al Jazeera Arabic which has so far refused to backtrack on the story which was "reported" (fabricated) in other websites backed by its own funder. Another incident was the "uncovering" (fabricating) by a Qatari funded MB multiplier website of UAE spies in Gaza under the guise of aid workers that was then reflected in the other mirror websites. (Source)



June 26, 2014

Qatar Is Down, But Not Out

What a difference a year makes in the Middle East. One year ago this week, Qatar's emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, handed over power to his son Sheikh Tamim, joining a short but seemingly growing list of monarchs who have abdicated in favor of their relatives. At the time of his abdication, Hamad left behind an empire of soft power and influence that spanned the entire region. Twelve months on, things could not be more different.

Only 72 hours after Tamim's ascension to the throne, the Muslim Brotherhood — arguably Qatar’s biggest ally that the Gulf state has propped up with billions of dollars and favorable media coverage through Al Jazeera Arabic — was swept from power in Egypt. The movement, which only a few days before held the presidency, the premiership, cabinet posts and parliament, was chased underground, jailed and exiled. President Mohammed Morsi did not even have time to send a cable of congratulations to the young emir.

Elsewhere, Tunisia’s Islamist Ennahda movement, another close ally of Qatar, agreed to give up power and appoint a caretaker cabinet only a few weeks after the Brotherhood was ousted in Egypt. In Libya, where Qatar committed money, media and military power, former Gen. Khalifa Hifter has pledged to “purge” his country of Muslim Brotherhood members.

The Qatari-backed and Muslim Brotherhood-dominated Syrian National Coalition no longer plays a significant role, with the opposition now headed by the Saudi-backed Ahmed al-Jarba, leading one political pundit to comment on Qatar’s influence that "Politically, it is in the back seat — or maybe not even in the car."

Qatar’s Muslim Brotherhood allies suffered a major blow when Saudi Arabia, the home of Islam’s two holiest shrines, joined Egypt and declared the group a “terrorist” organization. Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz sent a cable to congratulate Egypt’s new strongman President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi less than an hour after he was declared president, saying, “Causing any harm to Egypt is tantamount to harming Islam, Arabs and Saudi Arabia" and advising Sisi to “beware bad friends.”
In another clear reference to Qatar, the king said,
“Any of us should be aware that if he is able to provide assistance [to Egypt], but lagged behind rather than coming up with this duty, he will have no place among us tomorrow.”
Qatar is increasingly suffering a major image problem over its hosting of the World Cup. Accusations ranged from bribing FIFA officials to vote for Qatar as the host of the World Cup 2022 to repeat accusations of “slave labor” conditions in the country. In the past few weeks, the United States downgraded Qatar in its annual Trafficking in Persons Report, and all but one sponsor — the UAE's Emirates airline — called upon FIFA to open an investigation into the allegations known as “Qatargate.”

In March, in an unprecedented step, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain withdrew their ambassadors from Doha after Qatar failed to honor a joint security agreement in November 2013 that included commitments from Doha to cease support for the Muslim Brotherhood and its hosting of Gulf opposition figures.

Over the past few months, Kuwait’s veteran diplomat-turned-emir has volunteered to mediate between the Gulf Tripartite (Saudi, Bahrain and the UAE) and Qatar. A task that has yet to bear any fruits will be to find a face-saving measure for Qatar’s emir that is acceptable to the Gulf Tripartite. According to one diplomatic source, unless Qatar satisfies the group's conditions, the latter may opt to boycott the upcoming Gulf Cooperation Council summit in Doha in December, therefore denying the necessary quorum for a Gulf summit to convene.

The events of the past few months are turning 2014 into an annus horribilus for Qatar. However, it is too early to dismiss it from the game of nations. Qatar is still the host of the forward headquarters of the US Central Command, it is endowed with immense natural wealth and although Al Jazeera Arabic has turned into an Islamist shadow of its former self, its English-language networks are slowly gaining global prominence.

On a visit to France, Tamim told his hosts on June 23, “We have always been playing the role of a mediator between countries with differences.” Yet, the biggest test for the young emir will be whether he can work out his own differences with the Gulf Tripartite and not find himself alone at the table in December.



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