Funding
might be one of the forms of Doha’s support for terrorism, but it is not the
only means. Qatar, as part of its endeavors to embrace extremist groups and
provide shelter for them, has taken several measures, such as paying money to
have those terrorists released from U.S. prisons and allowing them to obtain
the Qatari nationality and appear on its media platforms, which have been
launched to recruit terrorists from Arab and European countries.
The
confessions made by Saleh Al-Qaraawi, founder of Abdullah Azzam Brigades, are
the best proof of Doha's support for extremist groups with the aim of
increasing pressure on the Arab regimes and playing a greater political role in
the Arab region.
During
his interrogation by Saudi authorities after being extradited by Pakistan five
years ago, Al-Qaraawi, who is considered one of the most dangerous leaders of
Al-Qaeda and wanted by Saudi Arabia, the UAE and the Interpol, unveiled Qatar’s
involvement in providing financial support for Al-Qaeda activities, and hosting
Afghan detainees from the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp and granting them the Qatari nationality
after reaching an agreement on that score with Taliban group in Afghanistan,
which has diplomatic representation in the Qatari capital .
Al-Qaraawi
also confessed to receiving funds from many Qatari figures in favor of Al-Qaeda
terrorist group during his stay in Iran. After leaving Iran for Waziristan on
the border with Afghanistan, Al-Qaraawi jointed a terrorist group and agreed
with Taliban to train its fighters on how to fight against U.S. and Afghan
forces. He also witnessed negotiations between Taliban and the Americans, in
which the former leader of Taliban Mullah Mohammed Omar demanded that Qatar
hosts negotiations with the Americans for two reasons; the first one was
Qatar’s support for Taliban, while the second was that Qatar had no embassy in
Kabul after being destroyed in a U.S. military operation there.
Al-Qaraawi
stated that the rounds of negotiations came up with a number of
recommendations, including extraditing Afghans detained in the Guantanamo Bay
detention camp to Qatar and allowing them to obtain the Qatari nationality
after Doha approved this proposal. In return, Taliban pledged to hand over a
kidnapped American soldier to the U.S. after having been seized by the group
for ten years.
In
2008, Qatar received Jaralla Al-Marri, a Qatari national who was detained at
the Guantanamo detention camp, from the U.S. and pledged that it will keep an
eye on him and inform the U.S. Administration of any updates.
However,
Al-Marri was seen in the same year wandering on London streets to propagate
Jihadi thoughts. This move prompted the U.S. Administration to press Doha to
withdraw him.
Qatar
signed a deal in 2014 with U.S. President Barack Obama, upon which the Gulf
statelet received five terrorists from the U.S. and pledged to keep them inside
its territories. However, U.S. media personnel quoted Doha-based diplomats as
saying that the five terrorists were seen living freely in Qatar shortly after
the deal. At the end of the year, U.S. news websites reported that three of the
five terrorists were seen fighting alongside ISIS fighters in Iraq and Syria.
The three fighters were named as Mohamed Fadl, Abdul Haq Wasiq and Norullah
Noori.
The
Qatari authorities also provided shelter for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who
vanished after the U.S. agencies informed Qatar of his location. Later on,
reports indicated that he was hiding inside the house of the Qatari interior
minister.
Terror
financiers are living freely in Qatar despite being placed on a worldwide
terrorism blacklist. For its part, the Qatari government does not feel shame to
publically announce its support for terrorist groups, making use of Qatari
businessmen and Islamic preachers to finance terrorist acts. Moreover, it
pledges to protect the terror financiers, although they pose a threat to global
security.
Besides
providing terrorist groups with necessary funds, terror fundraisers also work
on recruiting new fighters to carry out terrorist acts. The list of terror
fundraisers includes:
Al-Subaiy,
a Qatari national born in 1965, was placed on the UN terror list in October
2008 for providing financial support for terrorist groups, including Al-Qaeda.
In
January 2008, Al-Subaiy was convicted by a Bahraini court on charges of funding
terrorist groups and helping fighters to travel outside Qatar to receive
training on how to carry out terrorist acts. Al-Subaiy was close to Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, a senior leader of Al-Qaeda and the mastermind of the
September 11 attacks.
Al-Nuaymi
is a Qatari businessman and chairman of the Geneva-based Alkarama human rights
organization. He was found guilty of transferring over £125 million to Al-Qaeda
militants in Iraq and Syria, prompting the UK to freeze his assets and place
him on its sanction list . Al-Nuaymi was also placed on the U.S. blacklist on
charges of financing terrorist groups, including Al-Qaeda in Iraq and Syria,
Al-Shabaab in Somalia and other terrorist groups in the Middle East.
Born
in Al-Bayda town in central Yemen, Al-Humayqani is a co-founder and secretary
general of Al-Rashad Union and a member of the National Dialogue Conference. He
also serves as a chairman of Alkarama, a Swiss-based independent human rights
NGO operating in Yemen. Besides his work as a professor at Iman University,
Al-Humayqani is the right-hand man of the main fundraiser of Al-Qaeda, Abdul
Rahman Al-Nuaymi.
Al-Humayqani
was designated by the U.S. as a terrorist in 2013 after being charged with
financing terrorist groups, including Al-Qaeda. He was also accused by
Washington of exploiting his position as head of a Yemeni charity to collect
funds and transfer them to Al-Qaeda militants in the Arabian Peninsula.
Furthermore, Al-Humayqani was found guilty of facilitating the transfer of funds
from al-Qaeda supporters in Saudi Arabia to Yemen, prompting the U.S. Treasury
Department to freeze Al-Humayqani’s assets under the U.S. jurisdiction and
prohibit the Americans from dealing with him.
Al-Harzi
is one of the most dangerous terror fundraisers. He was accused of being in
charge of the ISIS terrorist group in Syria and collecting funds to train the
group’s fighters .
In
its statement, the U.S. Treasury Department accused Al-Harzi of helping foreign
fighters to cross the border from Turkey into Syria and facilitating the
transfer of $2 million from Qatar to carry out terrorist acts.
Al-Harzi
left Tunisia for Iraq in 2004 to put an end to his career as a prominent boxer.
In 2006, Al-Harzi was captured by Iraqi forces before being transferred to Camp
Cropper, where his right leg was cut off and replaced by an artificial leg
following an airstrike by the U.S. warplanes. His phone calls with his father
have been interrupted in 2009.
It
is noteworthy that Qatar has not taken any legal action against extremist
groups or their financiers living on its territories, including Khalifa
Muhammad Turki Al-Subaiy and Abd al-Rahman bin Umayr Al-Nuaymi.
Qatar
also hosts the largest number of ISIS accounts on Twitter, which are used by
the group’s fighters to recruit young people and plan terrorist attacks.
A study has revealed that Doha provides shelter for terrorist groups and extremists of the Muslim Brotherhood Global Organization and enables them to use its media outlets to incite terrorist attacks with the aim of fomenting chaos in the Arab region.
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