Qatari poet stripped of citizenship for supporting KSA

Qatari poet Mohammed bin Fitees Al-Murri is shown in this still image taken from a video shared on social media. (Courtesy: Al-Dhafra Channel video via YouTube)
Updated 02 October 2017
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Qatari poet stripped of citizenship for supporting KSA

JEDDAH: Qatari poet Mohammed bin Fitees Al-Murri, winner of the hit TV contest “The Millions’ Poet,” has been stripped of his citizenship for supporting Saudi Arabia in its dispute with Doha.
He also reportedly called on his government to stop supporting terrorists in the Middle East, and criticized its politicization of Hajj.
Doha accused Saudi Arabia of politicizing the pilgrimage. The Kingdom denied the claim and opened its borders to all Qatari pilgrims.
The situation has deteriorated to the point of “offending prominent figures and symbols in the Gulf, and this doesn’t satisfy Muslims,” Al-Murri said.
“The encroachment on the sanctities, the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques (King Salman) and scholars is a line of fire, which we don’t allow to be crossed or attacked,” the poet added.
“What prompted me to talk is my precious country, and my concern for its security, safety and stability, as well as my fear of the unknown future,” he continued.
“We, the Qatari people, hope that the crisis will be resolved as soon as possible. I’m a Qatari and Gulf citizen, and my loyalty to Qatar is unchanged, but at the same time I’m with the unity of the Gulf, and I’m keen on the security and cohesion of the Gulf countries.”
Last month, Al-Murrah tribal chief Sheikh Taleb and 54 relatives were stripped of their Qatari citizenship, in a move slammed as “collective punishment” by human rights groups. This followed Doha reportedly forcing 6,000 tribal members to leave Qatar.
The Saudi National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) condemned the withdrawal of citizenship of the 55 Qataris, including women and children.
French magazine Le Point recently reported that Qatari Emir Tamim Al-Thani ordered the imprisonment of 20 members of his ruling family on charges of supporting the Anti-Terror Quarter (ATQ) — comprising Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and Bahrain — at Doha’s expense.
Meanwhile, Twitter users condemned Doha’s action against Al-Murri in the trending hashtag #WithdrawalOfMuhammadBinFiteesCitizenship.
“People of Qatar, we need a dose of courage to break… the rule of the police state,” tweeted Qatari opposition spokesman Khalid Al-Hail.
“You will see many of the likes of Muhammed bin Fitees in the coming days.”
Mazen Al-Olaiwy tweeted: “Citizenship is a human right that shouldn’t be taken from the country’s people... Revoking it from its owners is an indicator of (Qatar’s) collapse.”
The withdrawal of Al-Murri’s citizenship was an “expected move by a scared and cowardly government,” tweeted @skyline_dreams1.
@no7glb asked of Qatar: “Where’s the freedom of expression you claim to have?”


Five takeaways from Mojtaba Khamenei’s defiant first message

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Five takeaways from Mojtaba Khamenei’s defiant first message

  • Khamenei’s father Ali Khamenei, supreme leader since 1989, wife, sister, child and brother-in-law were all killed on February 28 at the start of the US-Israeli war
  • The message was not accompanied by video or audio of the new leader giving the remarks, or even a new still image

PARIS: Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei on Thursday issued his first message since his elevation to the post, threatening revenge for his father’s killing, though he did not deliver the declaration in person.
Khamenei’s father Ali Khamenei, supreme leader since 1989, was killed on February 28 at the start of the US-Israeli war against the Islamic republic in an air strike that also claimed the lives of other top security officials and family members.
Mojtaba Khamenei was himself wounded, according to statements by some Iranian officials and state television, but there remains uncertainty over his whereabouts and physical condition.
Here are five takeaways from his first statement as supreme leader.

- Uncertainty over condition -

“The first message of the supreme leader of the Islamic revolution, his excellency Ayatollah Seyyed Mojtaba Hossein Khamenei!” an Iranian TV anchor declared before reading out the lengthy statement.
There was, however, no attempt to end the speculation over Khamenei’s condition, and the statement was not accompanied by video or audio of the new leader giving the remarks, or even a new still image.
Instead, the statement was read against the backdrop of an archive photo of Khamanei and a computer-generated flag of the Islamic republic.
- Call for revenge -

In the statement, Khamenei offered no hint that he was seeking to make peace with Iran’s enemies, and instead emphasized his desire for revenge in a war that has claimed the life of his father and his wife.
“A limited amount of this revenge has so far taken concrete form, but until it is fully achieved, this case will remain among our priorities,” Khamenei said.
“We will seek compensation from the enemy, and if they refuse, we will take as much of their property as we determine, and if that is not possible, we will destroy the same amount of his property,” he added.
He singled out a deadly strike on a school in Minab in southern Iran that Iranian authorities have said was carried out by the US and left 150 people dead, describing it as a “crime the enemy deliberately committed.”
A preliminary US military investigation has determined that a missile struck the school because of a targeting mistake, The New York Times reported on Wednesday.
- Threats to enemies -
Echoing the language of his late father, Khamanei also emphasized Iran’s potential to cause havoc across the region by squeezing oil supplies and using regional proxies.
He called for using “the lever of blocking the Strait of Hormuz” — a strategic waterway through which a fifth of global oil passes.
“The will of the people is for the continuation of an effective and deterrent defense that will make the enemy regret its actions.”
He warned that “studies have also been carried out on opening other fronts in which the enemy has little experience and in which it will be extremely vulnerable,” without giving details.
Those fronts would be “activated” if the war continued, he said.

- Warning to region -

Khamenei noted that Iran shared land or sea borders with some 15 countries and “we have always desired warm and constructive relations” with these neighbors.
But Khamenei called for the closure of US bases in nearby countries, saying “the claim of establishing security and peace by America was nothing more than a lie.”
“These countries must determine their stance regarding those who have invaded our dear homeland and killed our people.”
- Grieving son and husband -
He lauded his father as a “shining treasure and distinguished figure in history,” and said he had seen the late ayatollah’s corpse after his “martyrdom.”
Khamenei described the body as “a mountain of steadfastness” with the fist of his father’s one functioning hand — his other arm was paralyzed after a bomb attack in the 1980s — clenched in a sign of defiance.
Khamenei emphasized that as well as his father, he had also lost in the attack “my dear and loyal wife,” his sister, her child and his brother-in-law.
He did not mention his mother, who previous reports said had also been killed. The Fars news agency said Thursday those reports were inaccurate and she was still alive.
Khamenei said that he had learned of his appointment by the Assembly of Experts clerical body “at the same time as you” on television through the state broadcaster.