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Qatar Emir pledges $50 million to help Indonesia host Rohingya refugees

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

European Commission DG ECHO/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Qatar has promised the Indonesian government $50 million to help it cope with an influx of migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh, amid a worsening refugee crisis that has roiled Asia.

The pledge was made yesterday by Qatar’s Emir, during a meeting in Doha with Indonesia’s foreign minister, Retno Marsudi.

Qatar's Emir with Indonesia’s foreign minister.

QNA

Qatar\’s Emir with Indonesia’s foreign minister.

According to QNA, Marsudi requested support in providing Rohingya refugees with relief, such as shelters.

Earlier this month, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand drew global criticism for turning away and even shooting at boats of refugees that approached their shores. Many of the migrants had fled their home countries to escape persecution and poverty.

But last week, Indonesia and Malaysia consented to providing temporary shelter to those in need if the “resettlement and repatriation process will be done in one year by the international community,” Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman said in a joint press conference with Marsudi.

Maid ban

According to QNA, the Emir and Indonesian FM also “discussed a set of issues of mutual interest” yesterday.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Armando Torrealba/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Likely on the agenda was Indonesia’s new plans to ban its nationals from working as domestic help in Qatar and 20 other countries in the region.

The restrictions were announced earlier this month as a way to protect “human values and the dignity of the nation” and is expected to take effect in three months.

It would not apply to any nationals already working in Qatar, which is home to around 20,000 Indonesians working in domestic roles, according to Amnesty International.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar Emir pledges $50 million to help Indonesia host Rohingya refugees is from Doha News.)


Qatar shuts main Toyota showroom, two dealerships for ‘commercial fraud’

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Toyota showroom

Toyota Qatar/Facebook

Toyota showroom

With reporting from Riham Sheble

Qatar’s main Toyota/Lexus showroom on Airport Road has been closed for one month for violating consumer protection laws, the Ministry of Economy and Commerce has said.

The closure of the Abdullah Abdulghani & Bros. dealership, which took effect yesterday, May 28, also affects two Toyota dealers on Salwa Road.

According to the MEC, which posted the closure on social media, Toyota had apparently been selling cars to consumers as brand-new, without telling them that they had been in accidents before and were repainted/repaired before sale.

In addition to the main showroom, two Toyota dealers – Altadamon Motors and Trading Co. and Al-Tariq Automobiles Trading Co. – have also been shut for a month.

Other companies

This is the fourth company in Qatar to face such a closure in the past six months.

In January, Domasco Honda’s main showroom at TV Roundabout was shut for a month for the same offense.

And two weeks before that, the Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and Ram dealership on Al Matar Street, near the old airport, as well as the Nissan dealership on Salwa Road, near Ramada Junction, were hit with the same penalty.

Closed Honda dealership.

MEC/Facebook

Closed Honda dealership.

Each time, consumers expressed disappointment in the dealerships, saying their trust had been rattled when it came to buying cars in Qatar.

However, some in the auto industry have suggested that the transgressions may not be as serious as they sound.

Speaking to Doha News, one staffer previously said that scratches and dents can occur while vehicles are being transported to Qatar via ship. The cars are then repaired once they get to the dealership.

Still, companies that do not make consumer aware of prior repairs are apparently violating Article 7 of Law No. 8 of 2008.

This provision obligates suppliers to provide information on the type, nature and components of a product on its label. According to the law, suppliers are also prohibited from describing, advertising or displaying products using false or deceptive information.

Toyota’s service centers and other locations appear to be unaffected by the latest closures.

To file complaints about suspected breaches in the consumer protection law, residents can call the MEC at 8005000 or email info@mec.gov.qa.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar shuts main Toyota showroom, two dealerships for ‘commercial fraud’ is from Doha News.)

Qatar’s first handicap-accessible limousine service eyes expansion

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Ibticar's accessible vehicles

Lesley Walker

Ibticar’s accessible vehicles

Getting around Qatar can be challenging at the best of times, but for wheelchair users, it can be especially daunting.

To help tackle transportation problems faced by people with disabilities, one Qatar resident has recently helped launch the country’s first handicap-accessible limousine service.

Ibticar, the Arabic word for “innovation,” is the brainchild of Anirban Lahiri, 32, who was born and raised in Qatar.

For illustrative purposes only.

WELS net/Flickr

For illustrative purposes only.

Lahiri has muscular dystrophy and uses a wheelchair to get around. Speaking to Doha News, he said navigating Qatar can be quite frustrating, as there are very few accessible transport options.

A few specialist taxis do operate under Mowasalat’s Karwa brand, but Lahiri said he found them to be unreliable, as when he calls to make a reservation, there are often no suitable cars available.

The lack of options can be particularly problematic during emergencies. Lahiri said that several years ago, his mother was hospitalized.

His brother Ari, who also uses a wheelchair, wanted to visit her but it took him several days before he could arrange some form of accessible transport.

“This lack of inclusiveness simply means we aren’t able to travel. It is hurtful on various levels. The inability to travel is frustrating personally and emotionally,” Lahiri told Doha News.

Pilot launch

The entrepreneur, who graduated with a computer science degree from Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar, said that his inability to find a reliable, specialized transport service in Qatar encouraged him to set up his own company.

Anirban Lahiri

Lesley Walker

Anirban Lahiri

A year ago, he began Ibticar on a pilot basis. After several successful trials, he is now on a quest to further expand the current fleet of two adapted vehicles.

Passengers who wish to use the service can call 3335 2245 to reserve a car. While the rates are slightly more than a standard limousine service, Lahiri said he has tried to keep prices affordable.

A single journey up to 7km within Doha costs QR60. The adapted cars can also be used on an hourly rate for QR125, or for an airport pickup (QR150).

Each of the vehicles, including a GMC Savana van, cost around QR250,000 to buy and suitably adapt to conform with the standards set by the American Disability Act. Features include an electric lift and advanced lock-down mechanisms to safely secure a wheelchair.

One of the vehicles has space for two wheelchairs, and also has seats for other accompanying passengers.

“It’s important also to accommodate people traveling with the wheelchair user. This is about inclusiveness – that means a whole family can travel together safely,” Lahiri said.

Ibticar's accessible vehicles

Lesley Walker

Ibticar’s accessible vehicles

In addition, Ibticar’s drivers have been trained to work with people with mobility issues.

“All our staff are specialized. They know how to interact with people with disabilities, how to safely load and secure a wheelchair into the car, the particular needs of different disabilities, including a blind person, and what they should do in an emergency,” Lahiri added.

In its pilot phase, the service has been operating on a word-of-mouth basis, and has attracted “decent demand” from the community, he said.

Now, Lahiri would like to expand the fleet to four or five cars, and is looking for collaboration with private investors to help fund the project.

“Imagine never being able to know if you are going to be able to get somewhere because you don’t know if you can get a car.

As a wheelchair user, having a reliable transport service gives you more independence and improves your quality of life. As Qatar’s population expands, and more visitors come, there will be an increasing demand for this kind of service,” Lahiri added.

Wider accessibility

The development of a reliable, accessible taxi service would bring Qatar one step closer to better understanding the needs of people with disabilities here, Lahiri said.

Local laws make it illegal to discriminate against people with disabilities, but there are no practical guidelines on how to enforce this.

So while some buildings now have ramps built to access their main entrance, often these are too steep for people in wheelchairs to safely use.

“The infrastructure here needs to improve. There need to be more services that cater to people with special needs,” Lahiri said.

Earlier this year, at the Definitely Able conference in Doha, experts said one of Qatar’s challenges was to improve its accessibility.

Qatar Foundation stadium rendering

SCDL

Qatar Foundation stadium rendering

“As a city we must ensure all activities are accessible. A city with connectivity denies opportunities to all population,” said Nick Tyler, Chadwick Professor of Civil Engineering, University College London, as quoted by the Peninsula.

This is being taken into account in the design of the stadiums for the World Cup, which will be wheelchair accessible, Mark Dyer from the Supreme Committee of Delivery and Legacy (SC) said.

The Ministry of Municipality and Urban Planning (MMUP) has also previously said it is working on a plan to improve accessibility in Qatar by 2016, but has not provided any public updates about its progress to date.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar’s first handicap-accessible limousine service eyes expansion is from Doha News.)

Sepp Blatter re-elected as FIFA president for a fifth term

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Sepp Blatter

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Sepp Blatter

FIFA’s Congress has opted to re-elect embattled president Sepp Blatter for a fifth term, amid an international scandal inside the organization that apparently dates back some 20 years.

The 79-year-old Blatter, who has been president of FIFA since 1998, defeated Prince Ali bin Al Hussein of Jordan.

First round of results

Video still

First round of results

The FIFA vice-president had run on a platform of change, emphasizing the need to return transparency, accountability and inclusiveness to the world’s football governing body.

Of the 209 delegates of national football associations voting, Blatter took 133 votes in the first round, failing to secure the two-thirds majority he needed to be re-elected.

Prince Ali got 73 votes in the first round and withdrew from the race before a second round commenced.

Blatter was widely expected to win, as he had the support of the Asian Federation Confederation members (including Qatar), as well as the African bloc.

Corruption investigation

Blatter’s reelection comes days after the Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland, where FIFA is headquartered, launched a criminal investigation in connection to the World Cup tournaments being awarded to Russia and Qatar.

FIFA headquarters

MCaviglia/Wikimedia

FIFA headquarters

Also this week, the US ordered the arrest of several FIFA executives on charges of racketeering, fraud and other crimes that date back to the mid-1990s.

The US indictments appear to be unrelated to the allegations of bribery that have tainted Qatar’s bid to host the World Cup.

However, some of the individuals targeted, including former vice president Jack Warner, have previously been named in connection to the Gulf country’s efforts to host the tournament.

Addressing these charges, Blatter, who does not face any accusations of wrong-doing, said FIFA would continue to work with authorities and within the organization “to root out any misconduct, to regain your trust and ensure that football worldwide is free from wrongdoing.”

In a victory speech tonight, Blatter added “we will bring (FIFA) back” onshore, and said he would “not touch the World Cups,” presumably referring to the 2018 and 2022 bids.

This afternoon, the 2022 World Cup organizing committee in Qatar broke its silence over the developments of the last few days, reiterating that it hopes the World Cup unites people and accelerates positive change.

In a statement, the Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy continued:

“We wish to reiterate that we have fully complied with every investigation that has been initiated concerning the 2018/2022 bidding process and will continue to do so, should this be requested.

We conducted our bid with integrity and to the highest ethical standards.”

Thoughts?

(The post Sepp Blatter re-elected as FIFA president for a fifth term is from Doha News.)

Qatar’s farmer’s markets close for the season today

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Al Mazrouah Yard 2014

Chantelle D'mello

Al Mazrouah Yard 2014

After a six-month run, Qatar’s three farmer’s markets will close for the summer this afternoon and reopen in November, organizers have said.

The Al Mazrouah Yard near Umm Salal Stadium, the Al Khor/Al Dhakira yard and a newly opened market in Al Wakrah operated Thursdays to Saturdays from 7am to 5pm.

Over the season, they have sold fresh vegetables such as spinach, eggplants, bell peppers and cucumbers from more than 40 of Qatar’s farms.

Farmer's market

Chantelle D'mello

Farmer’s market

Some also sold livestock, fish and locally-produced honey as well as dairy products like fresh and canned camel milk.

This is the third year for the farmers’ market program, which allows food producers to connect directly with customers.

With Qatar importing the overwhelming majority of its food, the markets have been lauded for enabling shoppers to get their hands on freshly picked produce that hasn’t spent days inside a shipping container.

Did you check out the markets this season? Thoughts?

(The post Qatar’s farmer’s markets close for the season today is from Doha News.)

Doctor: Asthma rates steady in Qatar despite increased construction

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Meg/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Approximately one in five children in Qatar suffer from asthma, a rate that’s held steady in recent years despite the country’s relatively poor air quality and increasing levels of construction, a local healthcare expert has said.

However, Dr. Ibrahim Janahi – an associate professor of clinical pediatrics at Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar and head of pediatric pulmonology section at Hamad Medical Corp. (HMC) – said misdiagnosing asthma in children under the age of five continues to be a common problem here.

Many of the symptoms, such as coughing and shortness of breath, are generic and experienced by many Qatar residents who have been exposed to an increasing amount of construction dust and vehicle emissions as the country rapidly develops.

“The symptoms (asthma) presents at that age are nonspecific and mix with many different diagnosis,” Janahi said during a recent interview with Doha News.

He was speaking on the sidelines of a recent educational session for healthcare professionals in Qatar about the latest research on asthma management, diagnosis and treatment of the chronic disease.

Dr. Ibrahim Janahi

Dr. Ibrahim Janahi

Dr. Ibrahim Janahi

During the session, he explained to local doctors how to listen to different coughs and identify asthma “wheezes,” in addition to other symptoms.

He said that around 20 percent of children in Qatar between the ages of six and 14 have asthma, according to 2011 statistics.

That figure has apparently remained unchanged since a 2006 study he undertook. The percentage of local adult asthma sufferers is comparable to the rates found in children, he added.

Qatar’s figures are similar to other GCC countries such as Oman, where 20.7 percent of children have asthma.

Causes

Janahi argued that there is no consensus on what specifically causes asthma.

However, several theories have emerged based on the higher prevalence of asthma in developed countries, compared to developing countries.

One such contention is dubbed the “hygiene hypothesis.” It suggests that when one’s surroundings are so clean that an individual becomes sheltered from infections, their immune system becomes more sensitive and begins reacting to “antigens,” which increases the prevalence of asthma, Janahi said.

Another theory focuses on the connection between asthma and environmental factors, such as smoking, viral infections and exposure to certain particles.

“There (are) hypothesis that (state that) the increase of asthma in developed or industrial countries (is due to the) exposure to particles, to gases, to industrial byproducts, ” he said.

Industrial pollution

A recent study by Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar on the country’s air quality found that the annual average air pollution in Qatar exceeds not only guidelines set by Qatar’s National Standards, but those of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United States’ Environmental Protection Agency.

Qatar’s air is among the most polluted in the world, according to a 2014 WHO study.

For illustrative purposes only.

Paul Trafford / Flickr

For illustrative purposes only.

Although pollution acts as a trigger for asthma symptoms, Janahi said there is no proof that it actually increases the disease’s prevalence.

He said he and several colleagues conducted a study approximately five years ago that compared the rate of asthma prevalence in schools in the industrial areas of Ras Laffan and Umm Said to Doha.

They found no difference in the figures between the industrial areas and the capital city.

Similarly, unpublished research on the relative prevalence of asthma among schoolchildren in Doha produced comparable results.

Construction

As Qatar rushes to build new hotels, apartments, roads and stadiums for the 2022 World Cup, dust from construction is an inevitable byproduct.

Jahani describes the particles as a “trigger” for asthma sufferers, but not a reason that could increase the rate of those who suffer from the disease.

Another trigger is dustmites, to which many people who suffer from asthma are allergic.

For illustrative purposes only.

Peter Kovessy

For illustrative purposes only.

As Qatar endures another week of dusty weather in the aftermath of several sandstorms, keeping one’s house clear of dust and making sure air conditioners are cleaned thoroughly can help control an individual’s asthma symptoms.

Other asthma triggers include smoking, pollen, respiratory infections such as the cold or the flu, as well as extreme hot and cold temperatures, according to the American Lung Cancer Association.

Preventing asthma was one of the justifications given by officials from Qatar’s Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs last year for banning soft toys from nurseries.

Prevention

 For illustrative purposes only.

fikirbaz/Flickr

For illustrative purposes only.

Meanwhile, Janahi said that one of the few known ways of reducing a child’s chance of getting asthma is breastfeeding.

“Exclusive breastfeeding in the first six months of (a baby’s) life is very protective against asthma,” he said, adding that it is known to shield infants from other diseases as well.

More broadly, he said that asthma is a genetic disease that can be controlled, but not easily prevented. Even when comes to looking at genetic factors, it’s difficult to pinpoint the culprit.

“There isn’t a single gene that could be blamed for asthma, it’s very variable, there are many genes that are related to asthma,” he explained.

Similar to other diseases, asthma symptoms can be controlled through one’s lifestyle.

Fruit and veg boxes

Duniper/Facebook

Fruit and veg boxes

That includes consuming a diet of primarily unprocessed food, fruits and vegetables as well as getting a sufficient amount of sleep and maintaining a healthy weight.

Janahi said that studies have shown that obesity makes it more difficult to control asthma symptoms.

Qatar is regarded as having one of the most obese populations on the planet, which contributes to a host of related ailments such as diabetes.

Thoughts?

(The post Doctor: Asthma rates steady in Qatar despite increased construction is from Doha News.)

Music scene ‘thriving’ in Qatar, Doha Singers member says

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Doha Singers Doha Singers Doha Singers Doha Singers

All photos courtesy of Doha Singers on Facebook

Expats in Qatar looking to pursue their love of singing – or enjoying good music – now have a host of options here. Among them: an amateur choir group called the Doha Singers, which over the past two decades has found a way to not only persist, but thrive.

The community choir, which is holding a series of concerts this spring, was founded some 22 years ago by Rev. Ian Young, an Anglican priest and musician.

Doha Singers

Doha Singers/Facebook

Doha Singers

Since then, the group has grown from a membership of around 30 Christians to more than a 100 people of all creeds and nationalities today. An adults-only choir, members range in age from 18 to 60 years old, and hail mostly from the UK, Canada and the Philippines.

In an interview with Doha News, John Warren, a member of the group, said that while the choir has been around for a while, it only began growing in leaps and bounds after 2010.

“I believe it was started with the sole purpose of putting on a Christmas carol concert for the Christian expat community with performances at the Doha English Speaking School. Since then, the carol concert has developed into a festive music concert with both sacred and secular festive music..and an (additional) spring concert.”

Warren, an eight-year veteran of the group, said he joined the Doha Singers because of his lifelong love of music. The 37-year-old British father of two explained:

“I was lucky enough to have singing lessons at school and was awarded a choral scholarship to attend Cambridge University where I sang three to four times per week for the six years I was studying veterinary medicine, and I have kept up the singing ever since leaving university as it plays such an important part in my life,” he said.

Singing scene

Each year, the Doha Singers hold a carol concert and a main concert at hotels in December, and a large performance followed by several additional appearances at school fairs and hotels in the spring.

To prepare for their concerts, the Doha Singers meet weekly for two-hour rehearsals each season. According to Warren, the time is something that members have grown to cherish:

“Most of the choir have daytime commitments whether they be working or ferrying children from one side of town to the other, and rehearsals are, for many, a great way to escape the pressures of everyday life and a time to relax and spend some ‘me-time’ with a lot of music loving friends.”

Elsewhere around town, vocal enthusiasts also have the option of joining a handful of bands, most of whom perform at 21-and-over venues around town.

There are also two other choral groups – the Doha Youth Choir, and the Bach Choral Society – each of which has a specific niche in terms of age and genre of music.

According to Warren, all of these music-related groups are becoming more popular, thanks in part to Facebook and other social media sites that allow them to publicize their performances and engage with their audience.

Challenges

While the Doha Singers has managed to sustain itself through the years, the journey has not been without struggles.

Access to equipment like grand pianos and staging systems, and to venues for rehearsal and performance has proven an issue.

So far, the group has operated without a financial backer, and, according to Warren, relies on the support of organizations like 51 East, the Grand Hyatt Hotel, the American School of Doha and the College of North Atlantic Qatar for their various technical and space needs.

Doha Singers equipment

Doha Singers/Facebook

Doha Singers equipment

“We are an unfunded community choir relying on membership fees and the generosity of music lovers to let us rehearse, perform and borrow the vital equipment we need to perform. We have developed a loyal fan base over the years and again, without these wonderful people buying tickets, we would not be able to continue,” he added.

Looking forward, the group hopes to recruit more male members, expand their mailing list, and secure funding.

“We are a non-profit organization yet somehow need to find sufficient money to purchase the equipment we need to be able to sing in venues large enough for our audiences,” Warren said.

The group is slated to perform next at 7pm on June 5 at the College of North Atlantic Qatar. Tickets to the event, which features renditions of several Broadway hits like Phantom of the Opera, The Sound of Music, Les Miserables and West Side Story, cost QR75 and can be bought online here.

Thoughts?

(The post Music scene ‘thriving’ in Qatar, Doha Singers member says is from Doha News.)

Qatar stores told to offer discounts on 400 items during Ramadan

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Lesley Walker

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The Ramadan season in Qatar has officially kicked off a few weeks early this year, after the Minister of Economy and Trade announced an upcoming annual price freeze on some 400 food and everyday items in grocery stores.

The set prices take effect June 6 and will be in place until the end of Ramadan, which is estimated to be around July 16.

During this time, all shops in Qatar will be required by law to sell the listed goods at the prices set by the government, which is about 10 percent lower than usual.

The Minister of Economy and Commerce Sheikh Ahmed bin Jassim bin Mohamed Al-Thani issued Ministerial Decision No. 216 of 2015 outlining the items and their maximum costs as an effort to “ease the burden of extra costs on consumers,” QNA reports.

This follows the approval given by the state Cabinet earlier this month of the minister’s decision to fix the prices.

On the list

Items on the list include flour; cooking oils; dairy such as fresh and condensed milk, laban, yogurt and cheese; dates; processed fruit drinks and Vimto; staples like pasta and rice; fresh and frozen chicken and other meat; fruit and vegetables, tea, coffee and other canned foods; and items such as trash bags, hand soap and paper tissues.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Omar Chatriwala

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

This is the fifth year the government has fixed the price of everyday goods for shoppers in Qatar during Ramadan, when Muslim families buy and cook large meals to enjoy after breaking their fast and to share with friends, neighbors and those less fortunate.

This year’s list of goods is similar to last year. In 2013, the prices of 320 items of food and household essentials were fixed.

The minister has urged residents to report any violations and warned stores that inspectors would monitor prices and the stock of items.

Preparations underway

Ramadan is currently expected to start around June 18, according to predictions from the Sharjah planetarium, the National reports.

Stores and malls around town are already gearing up for the holy month. Decorations have been going up around town and some supermarkets have launched special promotions on favorite seasonal products.

For example, Al Meera, which has 35 branches around the country, said it would sell 1,000 items at cost-price during the month.

Ahead of Ramadan each year, health professionals issue warnings about not over-indulging in rich and oily foods, particularly when breaking the fast. In recent years, Hamad Hospital has seen a spike in patients complaining of stomach and digestive issues at the time.

Are you getting ready for Ramadan? Thoughts?

(The post Qatar stores told to offer discounts on 400 items during Ramadan is from Doha News.)


Qatar court scraps death penalty for Filipino convicted of spying

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Appeals court

Shabina S. Khatri

Appeals court

An espionage conviction against three Filipino men was upheld by Qatar’s Court of Appeals this morning despite a defense lawyer’s argument that there was no evidence that the men were spies.

However, a judge reduced their sentences following the year-long appeal hearing.

One man initially facing death was given a life sentence in prison, which in Qatar means a 25-year jail term. His two co-defendants had their prison sentences reduced from life to 15 years.

The judge did not articulate the reasons for his decision when reading out the verdict.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Tommaso / Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The three men were convicted by a lower court in April 2014 of espionage for passing along military and economic secrets to their home government.

The defendant initially sentenced to death was reportedly a lieutenant in the Philippines state security force who worked as a budgeting and contracting supervisor at Qatar Petroleum.

The two men who received life sentences in prison worked as technicians for the Qatar Air Force.

Lack of evidence

The exact nature of the allegations against the trio remains unclear.

The defense lawyer representing the men argued that there was no evidence supporting the espionage charges, beyond a confession that he said was obtained under torture.

Some reports suggested that the men – who were arrested in 2010 – were accused of passing along classified information about Qatar’s aircrafts, weapons and members of its armed forces to intelligence officials in the Philippines.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Paul Trafford / Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

But others following the case say the charges relate to economic secrets surrounding Qatar’s offshore oil and gas reserves that somehow ended up in the hands of foreign companies.

Last May, the Philippines government vehemently rejected the accusations as the men’s appeal hearing got underway.

“We categorically deny that we are engaged in espionage,” Philippines Foreign Affairs spokesperson Charles Jose said at the time in the country’s first public comments on the issue.

Outside of court today, Wilfredo Santos – the Philippines Ambassador to Qatar – said he “welcomed” the reduced sentences.

Speaking to reporters, he said embassy officials are “prepared to exhaust all necessary legal avenues” but stopped short of explicitly saying that today’s verdict would be appealed to Qatar’s highest court, the Court of Cassation.

Defense arguments

In his closing statement in March, a defense attorney argued that his clients were not involved in anything remotely resembling espionage, and that the only allegations of substance against the lead defendant were of corruption and embezzlement for personal financial gain.

A Qatar Emiri Air Force Dassault Mirage 2000-5 fighter jet.

(U.S. Navy Photo by Paul Farley

A Qatar Emiri Air Force Dassault Mirage 2000-5 fighter jet.

He suggested in court that the information that the defendants are accused of leaking – such as the helicopter and airplane models purchased by Gulf countries – is publicly available on the internet.

For his part, the prosecutor did not not present any arguments during the appeal trial, which lasted one year and was dominated by procedural issues that prompted the rescheduling of several sessions.

The case has drawn the attention of human rights activists, who had urged the Qatar government to investigate allegations that the men had been tortured while in custody.

Ahead of today’s verdict, Amnesty International published a first-person narrative written by a daughter of one of the convicted men.

The young woman, who is now 17 years old, described how a team of police officers from Qatar’s Criminal Investigation Department (CID) came to the family’s house to arrest her father.

She ended with a plea for the Qatar authorities to exonerate her father:

“I ask them to set him free at last and return what they took from us for the past five years. Those men responsible for taking him, torturing him and imprisoning him can correct their mistake now, before it’s too late.”

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar court scraps death penalty for Filipino convicted of spying is from Doha News.)

When it comes to love and marriage, more Qataris taking their time

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

David Precious/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

While the divorce rate among Qataris is undoubtedly high, the numbers don’t appear to be getting worse than in the years past, one of the country’s leading family experts has said.

“It’s not true that divorce rates are higher now than they were before,” Noor Al Malki Al Jehani, the executive director of the Doha International Family Institute, said in a recent lecture at Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar.

“We recognize that divorce rates are high, because there is another phenomenon happening at the same time, which is that Qataris are getting married less,” Al Jehani added during last week’s talk, which was titled Strengthening the Family in Qatar: Challenges and Required Actions.

Qatar's divorce rate

MDSP

Qatar\’s divorce rate

Government statistics show that the divorce rate among Qataris has been fluctuating in the past 15 years.

According to the most recent figures, released earlier this month, the divorce rate stood at 8.7 per 1,000 Qatari women and 10 per 1,000 Qatari men in 2011.

While those rates are higher than those recorded in 2001 and 2005, they are also lower than the comparable figures in 2002 and 2010.

However, Al Jehani said these numbers are inflated and don’t tell the complete story. She noted that in Qatar and other Arab nations, Muslim couples will sign a contract to become legally married during their engagement. If a couple decides to separate during this period, they are still counted as “divorced.”

To obtain a more accurate figure, Al Jehani suggested marriages that are signed on paper during the engagement period but not consummated should not be recorded as a divorce.

Marriage rates

Though the number of divorces has not remained constant, the marriage rate among Qataris appears to have been steadily declining since 2006.

It fell to 23.5 per 1,000 women and 24.3 per 1,000 men in 2010 before climbing modestly to 24.1 and 25.1 in 2011.

For illustrative purposes only.

Chantelle D’mello

For illustrative purposes only.

Qatar’s Ministry of Planning Development and Statistics (MDSP) suggested that the overall decline in the number of marriages is linked to higher education levels among women.

However, Al Jehani said she’s skeptical about that explanation:

“People tell me that women are not getting married or marrying late only because (of higher levels of) education and I don’t buy that,” she said, providing an alternate theory: As women become more economically independent, they face pressure to support their family financially rather than getting married.

Researchers at the MDSP also suggested that the high cost of a wedding is prompting some young couples to postpone tying the knot. But Al Jehani cautioned against using financial incentives as a way of encouraging people to get married.

“This is not the way to build families, it leads to the destruction of families. What we need to do is family education and encouraging people to get married for the right reasons,” she added.

Domestic violence

During her talk, Al Jehani discussed several other issues facing Qatari families, including domestic abuse.

 Saudi Arabia attempted to curb domestic violence with a powerful public awareness campaign that featured billboards of a veiled woman with a bruised eye. The English version features the words, “Some things can’t be covered.”

King Khalid Foundation

Saudi Arabia attempted to curb domestic violence with a powerful public awareness campaign that featured billboards of a veiled woman with a bruised eye. The English version features the words, “Some things can’t be covered.”

Al Jehani was involved in numerous initiatives to protect women and children and has reviewed and drafted several legislations related to women’s issues, such as the strategy of family cohesion and women’s empowerment included in Qatar’s first National Development Strategy 2011-16.

However, the number of domestic violence incidents in Qatar is perceived to have risen in recent years.

In 2012, the Qatar Foundation for Protection of Women and Children was recording an average of nearly four cases of abuse daily.

Meanwhile, a government study released last fall shed insights into local perceptions towards domestic violence.

It found that 16 percent of men and 7 percent of women living in Qatar say a husband is justified in “hitting or beating” their wives in certain circumstances, namely if the woman leave the house without telling her spouse or if she neglects their children.

The view that wife-beating is acceptable was highest among young males between the ages of 15 and 19.

Tackling the problem

Some experts argue that the number of incidences could be reduced with legislation that specifically outlaws domestic violence. Currently, cases of spousal and child abuse are covered under general assault laws, which experts say hinders investigations into violence that takes place in the home.

New legislation has been in the works for more than two years, but has not yet led to any new laws.

Al Jehani said additional non-governmental organizations in Qatar could complement the existing work being done by government ministries and other organizations helping those affected by domestic violence.

“NGOs are instrumental in achieving family policies and act as a bridge between the families whose wellbeing the policies and strategies seek to serve and the government and its institutions that design and implement these policies,” Al Jehani said.

She continued:

“Achieving Qatar’s vision of cohesive families requires partnership between government, civil society, the private sector, and first and foremost families themselves.”

Thoughts?

(The post When it comes to love and marriage, more Qataris taking their time is from Doha News.)

Enforcement of public smoking ban remains lax, Qatar residents say

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Fadhu Clicks/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Though Qatar has made some strides in stomping out tobacco addiction among its populace, lax enforcement of public smoking bans here continues to grate on many residents.

Over the weekend, Dr. Ahmed Mohamed al-Mulla, director of Hamad Medical Corp.’s anti-smoking clinic, told the Gulf Times:

“We have a legislation banning smoking in public places. But the implementation part is lacking. The Supreme Council of Health has deputed several officers to check the practice. But at the ground level, not much action is taking place. There must be a greater enforcement of the law.”

Al-Mulla was speaking ahead of World No Tobacco Day, which is being marked internationally today.

None of Qatar’s major supermarkets appeared to be halting tobacco purchases today, even though a handful of Qatar shops have observed this day by banning the sale of cigarettes – a six-year tradition in Dubai – in previous years.

Little enforcement

Currently, people who smoke in indoor public places in Qatar can face fines of up to QR500.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Laurence Currie-Clark/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Authorities have discussed passing a stricter anti-smoking law that would raise penalties on shops caught selling tobacco to minors and give malls the power to ticket those found smoking on their premises, among other measures.

But after years of discussion, there appears to be little tangible progress with the new legislation.

Meanwhile, shoppers continue to flout public smoking bans, much to the consternation of some residents.

During a visit to Landmark Mall this afternoon for example, Doha News observed two men drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes at Starbucks.

When asked about the men, the manager of the shop said he was not allowed to speak to media.

However, two customers sitting nearby said they couldn’t stand the smoke. Speaking to Doha News, Umm Abdel Rahman Al Thani said she has complained many times to the coffee shop’s staff about smokers, but to no avail:

“They are too afraid to tell customers it’s illegal,” she said. “Instead they (tell violators that) other customers are upset. Sometimes smokers will put out the cigarette, other times they won’t.”

Al Thani added that many people continue to smoke in malls because the threat of a QR500 is not enough of a deterrent.

Meanwhile, a waitress at Costa Cafe in Landmark Mall told Doha News that when she informs customers that it’s illegal for them to smoke inside the shop, her words often fall on deaf ears. She explained:

“By the time I call the Baladiya (officials at the Ministry of Municipality and Urban Planning) and they get here, the customer will have already left or put out the cigarette…so what’s the point?” she said, adding that the MMUP must catch customers in the act to give them a fine.

Other residents admitted that they shy away from complaining about smokers.

Mohamed Younis, a customer at Columbus Café in Landmark Mall and father of two young girls, said he knows the smoke is not good for his children, but he prefers not to get into an argument or altercation with other customers by complaining about their smoking.

Exposure to second-hand smoke is a growing problem in Qatar and around the world.

The World Health Organization (WHO) states that of the 6 million people annually who die from consuming tobacco, 600,000 of those die from exposure to second-hand smoke.

The organization added that tobacco causes more deaths than HIV, illegal drug use, alcohol use, traffic accidents, suicides and murders combined.

New focus on shisha

In addition to cigarette smoking, authorities have been working over the past several months to raise awareness about the dangers of shisha.

Some health researchers say a shisha smoker will inhale more harmful chemicals than a cigarette smoker in one puff. Doctors in Doha have also said shisha could be 10 times worse than smoking cigarettes.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Andy Hayes/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

But attempts to restrict its usage have been met with mixed success.

At the beginning of this year, Katara Cultural Village management announced a ban on shisha smoking in public areas at its restaurants and cafes for health reasons. Several restaurants said the ban cost them many customers.

Also last year, Souq Waqif restaurants were told to set aside half of their outdoor tables for non-shisha smokers. But that policy was quickly scrapped due to declining business.

Statistics

Despite efforts, smoking rates appear to be rising in Qatar.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Shabina S. Khatri

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Some 12 percent of the country’s population aged 15 years and above said they currently smoke tobacco. That’s up from 10 percent in 2013, the latest Global Adult Tobacco Study found.

Included in that report is what is believed to be the first available figures on shisha smoking in Qatar. Nearly 3.4 percent of adults said they are current shisha smokers. That includes 4.9 percent of men and 1.6 percent of women.

Meanwhile, in the past year, some 800 people have visited government clinics to help them stop smoking, the Primary Health Care corporation in Qatar said, according to QNA.

 

Thoughts?

(The post Enforcement of public smoking ban remains lax, Qatar residents say is from Doha News.)

Families of children killed in Villaggio fire file lawsuits in US, Qatar

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Memorial for Villaggio fire victims on second anniversary of deaths.

Chantelle D'mello

Memorial for Villaggio fire victims on second anniversary of deaths.

The parents of 13 children and one nursery teacher who died in the 2012 Villaggio fire have filed lawsuits against the mall’s architects, developers, consultants and management firm, in addition to several other companies based in the US and Qatar.

The civil suits were filed on Thursday, May 28 – exactly three years after the blaze – with Qatar’s court of first instance and with the Los Angeles Superior Court in California.

It described the continuing operations of the popular mall as a “waking nightmare” for the families.

Villaggio fire damage

Supplied

Villaggio fire damage

In all, 19 people died of smoke asphyxiation during the fire, including all the children who were trapped in upstairs daycare Gympanzee at the time, four staff nursery staff and two firefighters who tried to rescue them.

The smoke had spread after a fire broke out in the upstairs storeroom of the adjacent Nike sports shop.

The US lawsuit argues that the companies being sued “engaged in willful, wanton and reckless disregard” for the lives and safety of those who died in the fire.

It alleges wrongful death, negligence, survival action for negligence and negligent infliction of emotional distress on behalf of some of the families of the victims who died.

The documents do not specify the monetary amount that the families are suing for, but calls on the firms to pay for general and punitive damages.

The suit also seeks compensation for funeral and burial expenses, medical and legal costs and lost earnings for the past, present and future.

‘Fatal mistakes’

The California lawsuit names three defendants: F+A Architects, a Pasadena-based company that designed Villaggio; Business Trading Company (BTC), a Qatar firm that developed and managed the mall operations; and White Young Qatar, described as the project manager and contributing architect and engineer for the mall.

“The fire was a result of numerous fatal mistakes on the part of the defendants,” the suit states.

The action claims that “the fire and the resulting deaths were, by all accounts, preventable” and says that the fire control and suppression systems designed by F+A and White Young “wholly failed” at the time of the fire and its aftermath.

According to an official investigation, Nike employees noticed and failed to put out a fire that began in the mezzanine due to faulty electrical wiring in a fluorescent light, which led to the ignition of its plastics components before spreading to flammable materials.

Villaggio Mall

Gadget Dan / Flickr

Villaggio Mall

Civil Defense officers testified during the criminal trial that a highly flammable paint in Villaggio’s decorations caused the fire to spread quickly and made it more difficult to contain.

The officers asserted that the chemical, which Villaggio had been repeatedly fined for using prior to the fire, coupled with smoldering clothes from the Nike store, caused the heavy smoke that spread to the nearby play area, asphyxiating those inside.

Other issues within the mall also hindered rescue operations, the lawsuit said:

“The fans that were intended to remove smoke in the event of a fire instead forced smoke back into the mall. The fire alarms selected by the designers were inaudible or sounded like a faint doorbell. The smoke vents did not function properly, if at all. The sprinkler system failed. The fire hoses in the mall were too short to reach the sporting goods store or Gympanzee. The fire soon raged out of control and poisonous smoke permeated the mall.”

The lawsuit also cited previous court testimony that stated the children and Gympanzee employees were told by BTC staff to remain inside the nursery when the fire broke out; that mall operators didn’t tell firefighters there were children trapped inside the building; and that they were unable to offer a map of the mall or give them a location for the daycare.

Day after the Villaggio fire.

Omar Chatriwala

Day after the Villaggio fire.

The lack of a mall map also delayed fire crews when they attempted to cut through the roof of the mall to try to rescue the trapped children, the lawsuit states.

When responders finally gained access to the mall and nursery, they were too late to save the victims.

Grim scene

A deceased firefighter was found just outside Gympanzee. Some of the children were found tucked inside the shirts of the staffers, including teacher Shameega Charles, who had tried to protect them from the smoke.

Shameega Charles' son remembers her three years after her death.

Maryam Charles/Facebook

Shameega Charles’ son remembers her three years after her death.

Charles’ mother Maryam is cited as one of the plaintiffs in the case.

She was dependent on her daughter to provide for her and her grandson.

“The families have suffered substantial pecuniary and emotional losses, including loss of society, companionship and services,” the suit states.

BTC and its agents, it claims, was responsible for “gross violations of industry standards” relating to the poor operation of the fire and smoke detection and response systems in the mall.

“At all relevant times, defendant BTC negligently maintained and operated the mall so as to create a substantial and unreasonable risk that serious injury or death would result in the foreseeable event of a fire,” the claims states.

The company also failed to properly train its staff to respond appropriately in emergencies, did not ensure its exits were open and kept clear and had not registered Gympanzee as a nursery with the Ministry of Business and Trade (now called Ministry of Economy and Commerce).

Meanwhile, White Young is accused of designing a fire system that was “wholly inadequate” and for selecting interior decoration materials for the mall design made of flammable polysterene. The chemical melted during the fire, was difficult to extinguish and emitted “fast-spreading and toxic smoke,” the suit said.

Current proceedings

The civil lawsuits come at a time when criminal court proceedings may finally be wrapping up.

Following a trial, five of seven defendants –  including two mall officials, a government employee and the owners of the Gympanzee daycare – were found guilty of manslaughter in June 2013 and face five to six years in jail.

However, they remain out of prison pending an appeal hearing, which has taken nearly two years and is due to close this month. A verdict may not be issued until after the summer recess.

Some of the families have previously initiated civil proceedings in Qatar against the defendants to collect blood money compensation, but the majority of these claims have been frozen pending the outcome of the criminal case.

Thoughts?

(The post Families of children killed in Villaggio fire file lawsuits in US, Qatar is from Doha News.)

Former PM: Racism fueling unequal scrutiny of Qatar, Russia World Cups

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Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani

Foreign and Commonwealth Office

Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani

In a new interview, Qatar’s outspoken former prime minister has denied any wrongdoing in the country’s bid for the 2022 World Cup and asked why Russia – which will host the football tournament four years earlier – is not being placed under the same scrutiny.

Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani, who left his post as PM approximately two years ago, told Fox News this week that residents in the region believe the criticism is fueled in part by racism.

“If you see how (critics) talk about Russia and how they talk about Qatar … it is all about Qatar. Is it because (Qatar is) an Arab Islamic small country?” he said yesterday on the Fox program Sunday Morning Futures.

He added that he supports Russia’s right to host the 2018 World Cup.

While some have questioned whether it’s appropriate to hold the World Cup in Russia in light of its invasion of Ukraine, such discussions have been overwhelmingly overshadowed by reports of migrant worker abuse and bribery allegations in Qatar.

New investigation

Last week, the Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland announced it was launching criminal proceedings as part of an investigation into “irregularities” into the awarded of the allocation of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.

The investigation is looking into allegations of “criminal mismanagement and of money laundering” related to the selection process for the football tournaments.

FIFA headquarters

MCaviglia/Wikimedia

FIFA headquarters

The announcement came the same day that Swiss police, acting on behalf of US authorities, arrested several FIFA executives.

Officials say that more than $150 million in bribes and kickbacks were paid or agreed to by US and South American sports executives for media and marketing rights to international football tournaments since the 1990s.

The Swiss police statement said the two investigations were separate and the US Department of Justice did not mention the 2018 or 2022 World Cup in a lengthy statement that explained the indictment.

The dramatic move came two days before Sepp Blatter was re-elected as FIFA president for a fifth term and fueled perceptions that Qatar bribed members of FIFA’s executive committee to help secure support for its bid.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Doha Stadium Plus Qatar/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

In response, Qatar’s Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy – which is overseeing the country’s construction of World Cup stadiums and training facilities – said in a statement last week that there was nothing untoward about its winning submission:

“We conducted our bid with integrity and to the highest ethical standards,” the SCDL said in a statement.

Al Thani echoed that position yesterday and hinted that international media and some of the losing bidders were responsible for “flaring” the issue.

“We dealt with this in a fair competition. There was no corruption … (It) shows the ugly face of the other party when they did not win a fair competition.”

Past involvement

Al Thani – widely known by his initials, HBJ – held several senior government posts under former Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani including prime minister, foreign minister and chairman of the Qatar Investment Authority, where he oversaw the country’s sovereign wealth fund.

He was sidelined when Sheikh Hamad abdicated his position as Emir to his son Sheikh Tamim in 2013, and largely disappeared from public view for a year.

HBJ re-emerged in mid-2014, conducting an hour-long television interview with US journalist Charlie Rose and making several multibillion-dollar financial investments.

He was also photographed alongside Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani last October at the funeral of Christophe de Margerie, the CEO of French oil firm Total.

However, Al Thani downplayed his current connection to the Qatar government during his Fox interview by underscoring that he was speaking as an individual, and not on behalf of the country.

Syrian Embassy in Doha

Nora Basha/Twitter

Syrian Embassy in Doha

Much of this week’s discussion focused on regional security issues such as the influence of ISIS, which Al Thani attributed to a failure of the US and other military powers to oust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad as advocated by Qatar, Saudi Arabia and other states in the region.

He added that ISIS has been strengthened by the perceived exclusion of Sunnis from Iraq’s government in recent years.

More broadly, HBJ said the region’s instability has been fueled by decades of “bad policy” and suggested some rulers in the Middle East are primarily concerned with holding onto their own positions rather than improving the lives of their citizens:

“We have dictatorships which have stayed 40 years, most think about themselves how to stay in power. They do not talk about jobs and development.”

Thoughts?

(The post Former PM: Racism fueling unequal scrutiny of Qatar, Russia World Cups is from Doha News.)

Qatar Charity launches new travel booking website to boost donations

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QC's new website.

QC’s new website.

A new travel website launched by a charity in Qatar now allows users to donate to important causes without paying any extra costs.

The site, Travel and Aid, was created by Qatar Charity and went live yesterday as a way of offering an easy way to donate to those in need, allowing more people to help “make the world a better place,” a senior official said.

Speaking to Doha News, Mohammad Abdullah Al Yazidi Yafei, QC’s executive director of support affairs and head of the project said that the site is the first of its kind in the Middle East.

Like on any other travel website, it can be used to book hotels and flights. Currently, QC has an agreement with Expedia to arrange the bookings.

Launch of new website.

Qatar Charity's official Facebook page

Launch of new website.

According to Yafei, hotels and airlines usually pay a commission of about 2 to 4 percent to online websites for arranging bookings. In this case, that commission would go to QC to fund humanitarian aid projects around the world.

For now, flights can be booked on five airlines: Qatar Airways, Etihad, Lufthansa, Turkish Airlines and Air Berlin, but several others are expected to soon be added to the site, the official said.

Speaking a press conference the launch of the website on Sunday, Yafei told media:

“We call on people in society to interact with the website, when they want to travel, because it provides them with the booking service that they need, and they can donate at the same time, without any extra charge.”

Charity initiatives

Speaking to Qatar TV, QC marketing consultant Mohamed Al-Shahawy explained that around 50 percent of travelers in the Gulf book their vacations online, so the website will ideally serve as a way to automatically increase donations for charity projects.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Beshr O/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

In a statement, the charity said it would use the proceeds to fund initiatives that provide healthcare, pure water, education and social care for less fortunate communities.

Throughout the year, QC works to support these communities and natural disaster-ridden areas in more than 60 countries, from 18 field offices around the world.

Following the launch of the travel website, QC said it is also planning to debut a shopping site that follows the same model by the end of July.

This new site will allow shoppers to buy products from Amazon, eBay and others while also giving a percentage of their spendings to charity.

Have you tried the new travel site yet? Thoughts?

(The post Qatar Charity launches new travel booking website to boost donations is from Doha News.)

Doha petrol station, area shops closed over possible gas leak

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City Petrol Station, as seen closed today.

Peter Kovessy

City Petrol Station, as seen closed today.

Qatar authorities have closed a popular petrol station and several surrounding shops near Immigration Roundabout today over safety concerns following a suspected natural gas leak.

Speaking to Doha News, several nearby shopkeepers said there was a smell of gas in the air this morning. The petrol pumps were closed around 9:30am, and shops were told to shut around 11am, one manager said.

Photos taken by those passing by show several Civil Defense police vehicles and a fire truck around the City Petrol Station, which is just off the Doha Expressway on Al Luqta Street on the way towards Education City and the Qatar National Convention Center.

By midday, all but one Civil Defense vehicle had left, but the petrol station – along with the adjacent Qatar National Bank branch, Porsche service center, dry cleaner, cafeteria and several other shops – remained closed.

City Petrol Station, as seen closed today.

Peter Kovessy

City Petrol Station, as seen closed today.

Plastic barriers and a pair of pylons blocked the only entrance to the petrol station.

When asked for a comment, a Civil Defense official onsite declined to discuss what was happened, saying only that they were responding to an “emergency situation.”

A Ministry of the Environment official also visited the property and declined comment.

One man on the property, who was explaining to customers arriving on foot that everything was closed, suggested that the gas leak occurred close to the bank branch rather than at the petrol station itself.

Fewer options

It is unclear how long the petrol station will remain closed.

The news has been greeted with frustration by some motorists, given that central Doha has a dwindling number of petrol stations despite increasing demand.

Over the past few years, several Doha petrol stations have closed for safety reasons or to make way for new developments.

Al Andalus gas station under renovations.

Peter Kovessy

Al Andalus gas station under renovations.

That includes the station just north of Landmark Mall, which shut more than a year ago after a fatal explosion in a nearby restaurant.

The Markhiya Petrol Station near Burger King (Markhiya) signal has also closed, as has the petrol station near Villaggio Mall.

And on C-Ring Road, the old Al Andalus Petrol Station remains shuttered, following an apparent underground explosion in September 2013.

Qatar’s state-backed fuel company Woqod has said it plans to open more than a dozen petrol stations over the next year, but most of those will be outside of Doha.

Thoughts?

(The post Doha petrol station, area shops closed over possible gas leak is from Doha News.)


Al Sharq editor resigns after explicit photo published in Doha newspaper

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Premier Source Marketing

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

One of Qatar’s most well-known and respected editors has resigned after his newspaper unintentionally published a sexually explicit photo alongside a story about henna tattoos.

Jaber Al Harmi, editor-in-chief of Al Sharq, announced his departure on Twitter yesterday afternoon, in response to a growing online furor about the photo, which appeared on page 29 of yesterday’s daily.

Jaber Al Harmi

Jaber Al Harmi/Facebook

Jaber Al Harmi

The article contained health warnings about the use of certain types of henna.

It was accompanied by a stock image that showed a woman’s palms decorated with henna designs illustrating various sexual positions from the ancient Indian sex manual Kama Sutra.

In an apology published on the front page of today’s Al Sharq, Al Harmi called the mistake “the worst” he’s seen in his 25-year journalism career. He continued:

“I take full responsibility in front of God before everything and in front of Qatar, the country and people…

This painful incident has shown us, how much the people of our society hold on to religion, values and ethics and that is something delightful.”

In response to the situation, Al Sharq has fired the journalist who published the photo.

Additionally, the journalist’s direct supervisor has been warned and fined part of his salary, and stricter editing measures are being implemented to ensure such mistakes do not happen again, the apology states.

Reaction

News of Al Jaber’s pending exit was met with dismay by hundreds on Twitter yesterday.

Under the hashtag #الحرمي_استقالتك_مرفوضة (Al Harmi your resignation is rejected), dozens of people expressed support for the editor, saying:

Translation: Jaber Al Harmi is one of Qatar’s pyramids who we cherish. His brave step should be met with a more courageous one, (which is) rejecting his resignation.

Translation: Your resignation Mr. Jaber shows that you are a person who has integrity, bravely takes responsibility, has a good estimation of matters and has made a difference in the newspaper.

Translation: Journalism is a sensitive occupation both in a positive and negative way, because it depends on scoops and distinction, which can sometimes lead to unintentional mistakes.

For now, it remains unclear if Al Harmi will actually be leaving the newspaper, which omitted any mention of his resignation in today’s apology letter.

According to the editor’s son, the board of directors has rejected Al Harmi’s offer to quit, and his name continued to appear in Al Sharq’s masthead today.

Thoughts?

(The post Al Sharq editor resigns after explicit photo published in Doha newspaper is from Doha News.)

Qatari-Emirati couple stand trial in US for abusing household staff

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Penn State/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

A Qatari military official and his Emirati wife have been arrested in the US for allegedly abusing two of their housekeepers, forcing them to work without pay and threatening them with jail in Qatar if they complained, according to the US Department of Justice.

Hassan Salem H. M. Al Homoud and his wife Zainab Al Hosani were arrested by special agents of a division of the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Saturday.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Adam Bermingham/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Yesterday, the US Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Texas announced in a statement that the couple has been charged with “engaging in forced labor by obtaining the labor and services of two persons by means of force, threats of force, physical restraint, and threats of physical restraint.”

The case came to light in early April when an officer from the San Antonio Police Department found one of the women on Camp Bullis Road in “apparent distress.”

The women took officers to a nearby apartment where she and the other housekeeper lived. According to the statement, that flat was furnished “with only a pallet on the floor for sleeping.”

The couple made their first appearance in a court in San Antonio, Texas yesterday afternoon. If they are convicted, they face up to 20 years in prison and/or a fine of up to $250,000.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Amnesty International

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

It is likely that such an abuse case would be treated differently in Qatar, where domestic help is not covered by the labor law. Just months ago, officials in Doha and from across the GCC backed away from plans to introduce a common contract for domestic workers in the region.

It had been hoped that this legislation would have addressed the exploitation of women, nannies and cooks in homes in the Gulf.

Meanwhile, the Indonesian government said last month that it would ban its nationals from taking jobs as domestic staff in 21 MENA countries, including Qatar. This was being done to “protect the human values and dignity of the nation,” the manpower minister said.

The charges

According to the charges, Al Homoud had moved to San Antonio, along with his wife and two children, to attend military training at Camp Bullis, a US army training camp.

Training exercise at Camp Bullis, for illustrative purposes

US Air Force/Flicr

Training exercise at Camp Bullis, for illustrative purposes

In June 2014, Al Homoud sponsored visas for two women to work for the family as household staff while in the US.

One of the employees is an Indonesian citizen and the other is from Bangladesh.

While in San Antonio, the two women were housed in primitive conditions, unable to freely move or travel and were given only limited amounts of food, the criminal complaint states.

Al Homoud and Al Hosani also apparently refused to allow the women to have cellphones, and withheld their passports and visas.

“Al Hosani also threatened the workers with arrest and incarceration in Qatar if they failed to perform their work obligations,” the State’s Attorney’s Office statement added.

During the initial federal court hearing yesterday, Magistrate Judge John Primomo set the defendants’ bond at $100,000 each, according to local publication the San Antonio Express News.

No salary

The women were apparently working under a domestic employee contract that stated they would make about $1,500 a month.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Business2community.com

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

However, the women claimed that despite repeated requests, they were never paid during their time working for the family, and Al Hosani threatened to send them to jail in Qatar if they spoke out or stopped working.

Each day, the women were taken from their apartment – to which they had no key – to the family home, where they worked as housekeepers.

They were only allowed to eat leftovers, but they limited themselves to what they ate and drank as they were not allowed to use the toilets in the family home, the statement said.

In the claim, the Indonesian helper alleged that Al Hosani beat her with a stick on one occasion when she caught her going through the trash looking for food.

When they were not working, the women said they were told to sit inside the home’s garage in a plastic structure similar to a portable shed. A neighbor reportedly said she heard crying coming from the garage, Express News reported.

A preliminary court hearing is due to take place on Friday morning, the newspaper added.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatari-Emirati couple stand trial in US for abusing household staff is from Doha News.)

Qatar’s population spikes again amid influx of blue-collar workers

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Frederik/RedHorn Photography

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Qatar’s population growth accelerated in May as an additional 32,135 residents moved or returned to the country, setting yet another all-time record.

The latest figures from the Ministry of Planning Development and Statistics come alongside a new analysis of Qatar’s demographics that show the country’s population continues to be overwhelmingly male, uneducated and concentrated in Doha.

That’s despite a national vision of having a highly skilled workforce dispersed across the country.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Sam Agnew/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Government figures state that were 2.37 million people within Qatar’s borders at the end of last month. That’s an increase of more than 9 percent, or 200,825 additional residents, from May 2014.

The new numbers are a reversal of signs over the last few months suggesting that the country’s population may be starting to level off.

This was thought to ring true as major energy projects are being postponed amid low oil prices, and Qatar’s infrastructure building boom approaches its peak.

The country is racing to build new roads, rail lines, hotels and stadiums ahead of the 2022 World Cup. There are some 18,500 currently working on the Doha Metro project alone.

Meanwhile, the influx of expats has necessitated new schools, hospitals and apartment blocks – as well as more construction workers to build them.

The country’s sustained population growth appears to be outpacing the expectations of many experts.

Last fall, Qatar National Bank predicted that the number of residents would increase by 7.4 percent annually in the coming years. But during the first five months of 2015, the annualized growth rate was actually between 8.7 percent and 10.3 percent.

Workforce profile

Qatar’s National Vision 2030 aims to turn the country into “a knowledge-based economy characterized by research, development and innovation.”

Getting there, according to the country’s National Development Strategy, “requires a transition from the current low-skilled, low-productivity and low-wage economy to a high-skilled, high-productivity and high-wage economy.”

However, a recently published government report said nearly three-quarters of Qatar’s workforce was comprised of unskilled or semi-skilled individuals in 2012.

Breakdown of expats' jobs in Qatar.

PPC

Breakdown of expats’ jobs in Qatar.

Additionally, nearly two-thirds of economically active expats hold a primary level education or less, Qatar’s Permanent Population Committee (PPP) found in Qatar Population Status 2013. In contrast, only 17 percent hold a university degree.

Among Qataris, the report said more nationals have joined the private sector in the past decade.

Still, while the proportion of economically active Qataris working for private firms more than doubled between 2004 and 2012, from 4 to 9 percent, the public sector continues to be the employer of choice, it added.

This is because government departments and institutions are perceived to offer higher salaries and better job security.

One of the report’s recommendations is for the government to introduce legislation that would require private companies to offer comparable wages and benefits to the public sector, in an effort to attract more Qataris and reduce the country’s reliance on foreign workers.

Population density

The PPP report also reinforced the popular perception that Doha is becoming much more crowded.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Peter Kovessy

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

There were 3,731 people/ square km living in Doha in 2012, up from 3,136 a year earlier.

The influx has continued to put a strain on the city’s road network and other infrastructure, such as water and sewer services.

To mitigate this, government planners have been actively encouraging residents to live outside Qatar’s capital by constructing new schools, healthcare facilities and recreational amenities in outlying areas.

However, many of Qatar’s major employers remain concentrated in the West Bay / Dafna area as well as along major commercial corridors such as C-Ring and D-Ring roads.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar’s population spikes again amid influx of blue-collar workers is from Doha News.)

Former Taliban prisoners to remain in Qatar after travel ban extended

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Taliban members in Qatar

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Taliban members in Qatar

Five senior Taliban members will continue to call Qatar home for the foreseeable future after officials here agreed to extend a travel ban on the former Guantanamo Bay inmates.

The men were released from the US-run prison last year in exchange for US Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, who had been captured in Afghanistan. Under the initial deal, which expired this week, the Taliban members were transported to Qatar and prevented from leaving the country for a year.

The prisoner swap was controversial in the US, with some politicians suggesting that the men could return to the battlefield once the travel ban expires.

On Monday, US State Department spokesperson Marie Harf said the Taliban members would not be departing Qatar anytime soon, but gave no indication about how long they would remain here:

“The Government of Qatar has agreed to maintain the current restrictive conditions on these individuals as we continue the discussions to determine the path forward here when it comes to these five individuals. All five remain in Qatar, where they remain subject to extensive monitoring as well as travel restrictions,” she said.

“We continue to work to make sure that these individuals do not pose a threat to the US, and these are ongoing discussions about what will happen next.”

Living in Qatar

Locally, the Taliban members appear to have kept a relatively low profile. Several foreign journalists have visited Qatar in an attempt to find the men, but none appeared to have been able to locate them.

But internationally, some of the members have been accused of “reaching out” to individuals fighting US forces in Afghanistan.

Earlier this year, US Senator Lindsey Graham – who yesterday announced that he’s running for the Republican presidential nomination – asserted: “The Taliban five are communicating with people inside Afghanistan.”

Qatar foreign minister Dr. Khalid Al Attiyah.

Ministerie van Buitenlands

Qatar foreign minister Dr. Khalid Al Attiyah.

At the time, Qatar’s foreign minister – Dr. Khalid bin Mohammed Al Attiyah – called the reports “totally false.”

“They are living according to the agreement we signed with the United States,” he said, according to Reuters.

American and Qatari security agencies “will monitor and pick up anything that will happen…I can assure you, no one has made an attempt to go back” to Afghanistan, he added.

Meanwhile, the New York Times cited US officials as saying that the former prisoners were previously members of the Taliban government and have aged while in custody, making it unlikely that they would be headed to the battlefield once they’re allowed to leave Qatar.

Hamad International Airport

HIAQatar / Twitter

Hamad International Airport

Where exactly the men would go once they are permitted to leave the country remains uncertain.

In a separate article, the New York Times noted that the Taliban members are under a UN travel ban, which means they are only legally allowed to travel to their native Afghanistan, where they would likely be arrested under Mohammad Ashraf Ghani’s government.

Ismail Qasimyar, a member of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council said the men should either remain in Qatar indefinitely or be handed over to the Afghan government, according to Voice of America.

Taliban-Qatar relations

For the past several years, Qatar has attempted to serve as an intermediary between the Taliban and the US, as well as its Afghan government allies.

Taliban office in Doha.

Salman Siddiqui/Twitter

Taliban office in Doha.

In 2013, a local Taliban office in Dafna opened as part of those efforts. However, it closed less than a week later after drawing the fire of Afghanistan’s then-president, Hamad Karzai.

Karzai apparently took offense to the raising of a flag and installation of a placard that named the building the “Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan” – the former name of the country when it was under Taliban rule.

More recently, Qatar hosted a “national dialogue” between Afghan and Taliban officials.

Qatar is keen to “establish security and stability in Afghanistan” through “open discussions,” said Yousif al Sada, the director of the Asian department at Qatar’s foreign ministry, according to QNA.

However, Reuters quoted an official Taliban spokesperson downplaying expectations by saying the organization’s participation in the conference “does not mean at all peace talks or negotiations.”

Thoughts?

(The post Former Taliban prisoners to remain in Qatar after travel ban extended is from Doha News.)

FIFA President Sepp Blatter to step down amid corruption scandal (updated)

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Sepp Blatter

FIFA/Twitter

Sepp Blatter

With reporting from Lesley Walker

In a hastily called press conference tonight, FIFA President Sepp Blatter announced he will resign as head of the world’s football governing body.

The 79-year-old, who just won his fifth term on Friday (with Qatar’s backing), has come under fire recently due to a organization-wide corruption scandal.

Speaking at the press conference, Blatter said:

“The elections are closed but the challenges that FIFA are facing have not come to an end. FIFA needs profound restructuring.

While I have a mandate from the membership of FIFA, I do not feel that I have a mandate from the entire world of football – the fans, the players, the clubs, the people who live, breathe and love football as much as we all do at FIFA.”

An extraordinary Congress will be called to elect his successor.

According to the organization’s bylaws, the vote cannot take place for at least another four months, during which Blatter will continue to serve as president.

Domenico Scala, chairman of the FIFA audit and compliance committee, spoke after Blatter, and said that elections would likely be held sometime between December of this year and March 2016.

Recent events

Dissatisfied with what has been seen as a lack of transparency in FIFA, many in the world football community have been calling for Blatter’s resignation for years.

Support for his exit grew last week after several FIFA officials were arrested by order of the US on charges of racketeering, fraud and other crimes that date back to the mid-1990s.

FIFA headquarters

MCaviglia/Wikimedia

FIFA headquarters

Also last week, the Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland, where FIFA is headquartered, launched a criminal investigation in connection to the World Cup tournaments being awarded to Russia and Qatar.

Despite the scandal, FIFA pushed ahead with presidential elections two days later, during which Blatter was re-elected.

However, the final straw appeared to come after the New York Times today reported that Blatter’s top deputy, Jerome Valcke, was linked to a $10 million transfer of funds cited in the US indictment.

FIFA said this afternoon that Valcke was not involved.

What it means for Qatar

Neither Blatter or Scala mentioned any specific controversy that is currently swirling around FIFA. However, other football executives immediately turned their attention to Qatar’s 2022 World Cup bid:

“Something has come out of the events of last week that has caused Mr Blatter to resign,” said English Football Association chairman Greg Dyke, according to The Guardian. “He’s gone. At long last we can sort out Fifa. We can go back to looking at those two World Cups. If I were Qatar right now I wouldn’t be feeling very comfortable.”

With the president’s resignation, Qatar’s World Cup organizers have lost one of their most powerful and ardent defenders.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Sean Knoflick / Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

It was under Blatter’s tenure that Qatar won the right to host the tournament, a choice that remains controversial among many critics to this day.

Blatter has previously lashed out at Qatar’s critics, suggesting last June that “there’s a great deal of discrimination and racism” behind the “storm against FIFA relating to the Qatar World Cup.”

Whether his successor adopts a similar tone or presses Qatar to crack down on the abuses of migrant workers will depend on the candidates vying to replace him.

None of the three challengers who campaigned in last month’s election publicly criticized Qatar, although all made general statements about the need to eliminate corruption.

What’s next

Along with elected a new president, FIFA will undertake structural reforms that are expected to include changes to the composition of its executive committee as well as how its members are selected, Scala stated.

“Current events only reinforce my determination to drive this reform,” he said.

Scala also suggested that executive committee candidates would be subject to “FIFA-driven integrity checks,” rather than leaving such vetting procedures up to individual football confederations.

Finally, Scala said FIFA would seek to publish the compensation figures of the president and executive committee members as well as introduce term limits.

All these measures would be debated at the same extraordinary session in which FIFA is expected to elect a new president. Speculation is already rife about who would lead the organization, with former contender Prince Ali bin Al Hussein of Jordan and UEFA President Michel Platini’s names coming up.

Platini, who has previously calling for Blatter to step down, said of tonight’s announcement:

Thoughts?

(The post FIFA President Sepp Blatter to step down amid corruption scandal (updated) is from Doha News.)

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