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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Former Al Jazeera English Bureau Chief Reveals Doha's Domestic Troubles
Mohamed Fahmy -Photo courtesy: Wikipedia
(SALEM, Ore.) - Mohamed Fahmy, an Egyptian-Canadian journalist who was
the Cairo bureau chief for Al Jazeera English revealed new aspects of Doha's Domestic Troubles representing
oppression in political freedom and divisions within al-Thani family
itself, in a New York Times Opinion Pages article titled, Doha's Domestic Troubles.
The following is an excerpt from Mohamed Fahmy's article:
Qataris who seek greater freedom of expression and more democracy in
their oil-rich nation face disappointment, and perhaps worse.
In what may presage a wider crackdown on dissent in Qatar, Sheikh
Fahad bin Abdullah al-Thani — a cousin of the ruling emir, Sheikh Tamim
bin Hamad al-Thani — was last month sentenced to seven years in prison.
Sheikh Fahad was accused of shooting three officers as he stormed a
police station in a bid to free his two sons, but the Qatari
government’s version of events conflicts with other witnesses’.
According to family members and others to whom I’ve spoken, it was
state security forces that did the storming, using armored vehicles
against the sheikh’s palace in Doha, the capital, last January. The
sheikh and his sons, they say, were severely beaten during the
confrontation.
Sheikh Fahad had a longtime dispute with the government over its
seizure of some of his inherited land, according to his family. But
opposition activists also believe that the arrest was in retaliation for
the sheikh’s political activities.
According to the lawyer and human rights advocate Najeeb al-Nauimi,
who is in contact with the sheikh’s family, he is in prison in Doha.
A former justice minister who has become an outspoken critic of the
government, Mr. Nauimi represents dozens of Qataris who have suffered
under the absolute monarchy’s silencing of opposition voices.
One of his clients is the poet Muhammad al-Ajami, who is serving a
15-year sentence, after a secret trial in 2012, for “criticizing the
emir” in a poem that praised the Arab Spring. After the verdict, Mr.
Nauimi said, “Our judicial system cannot be trusted.”
For the full article Doha's Domestic Troubles in the New York Times Opinion Pages, visit: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/14/opinion/mohamed-fahmy-doha-qatar.html?_r=0

