New evidence of Qatar’s $1 billion ransom that funds terror

In this April 21, 2017 file photo, the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Tamim Al-Thani, second left in front row, welcomes released kidnapped members of Qatar’s ruling family at the Doha airport, Qatar. (AP)
Updated 18 July 2018
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New evidence of Qatar’s $1 billion ransom that funds terror

  • 28 Qataris were taken hostage on Dec 16, 2015, while hunting with falcons in southern Iraq, having ignored all warnings about not traveling to the area
  • Qatar paid the biggest ransom in history: $1 billion plus $125 million in “side payments” to terrorist groups such as the Al-Nusra and Kataib Hezbollah

LONDON: Damning new evidence has emerged to suggest that a $1 billion ransom paid by Qatar for the release of 28 Qataris kidnapped in Iraq has been used to fund terror. 

Text messages and voicemails obtained by the BBC reveal communications between Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani, Qatar’s newly appointed foreign minister, and Zayed Al-Khayareen, its ambassador to Iraq, as talks to release the hostages dragged on for 16 months. 

In the end Qatar paid the biggest ransom in history: $1 billion plus $125 million in “side payments,” all paid to groups such as Al Nusra Front, the Al-Qaeda affiliate now known as Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham, and the Iran-backed Iraqi Shiite paramilitary group Kataib Hezbollah. 

The ransom payment was a key factor in driving the Anti-Terror Quartet — Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt — to close borders and sever diplomatic ties with Qatar.

The 28 Qataris were taken hostage on Dec 16, 2015, while hunting with falcons in southern Iraq, having ignored all warnings about not traveling to the area. The party included members of the ruling family.

The kidnappers were identified as members of Kataib Hezbollah but nothing was heard from them until three months later, when they offered to release three hostages in return for “a gesture of goodwill”  — money. 

Ambassador Al-Khayareen wrote in a text to the foreign minister: “This is a good sign for us, which indicates that they are in a hurry and want to end everything soon.”

As the months passed, however, the kidnappers kept upping their demands. As well as money they wanted Qatar to leave the Saudi-led coalition fighting the Houthis in Yemen, and demanded the release of Iranian soldiers held in Syria.

One Kataib Hezbollah negotiator, Abu Mohammed, wanted $10 million for himself. “All of them are thieves,” the ambassador wrote to the minister.

Two Iraqi mediators recruited by the ambassador asked in advance for $150,000 in cash and five Rolex watches when they visited Sheikh Mohammed. Who the “gifts” were for was not clear. Qatari officials admit the texts and voicemails are genuine but say they have been edited in a misleading fashion.


Hamas retakes control of daily life in Gaza

Updated 9 sec ago
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Hamas retakes control of daily life in Gaza

  • “Everyone knows that Hamas possesses the real power in Gaza,” said Shaaban, a displaced Palestinian
  • “Currently, we operate only in areas under Hamas control,” said a merchant

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Hamas has reasserted control over large parts of Gaza from which the Israeli military withdrew under the US-sponsored ceasefire, exercising power through police and working to restart public administration.
The inaugural meeting of US President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” on Thursday included an announcement on the recruitment of a new transitional Palestinian police force in Gaza meant to take over security from Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas.
It also saw several countries pledge to send troops for the nascent International Stabilization Force in the Gaza Strip, without any timetable set.
Hamas still refuses to lay down its arms under the conditions set by Israel, but it has pledged to hand over power, insisting it no longer wants to administer the territory it seized by force nearly 20 years ago.
“Everyone knows that Hamas possesses the real power in Gaza,” said Jaber Shaaban, a displaced Palestinian living in a tent in Gaza City.
“Hamas is the strongest and largest organized entity and it has power, police and a government,” the 64-year-old added.
“Without Hamas, the committee cannot work,” he said, referring to the 15-member Palestinian technocratic committee formed to handle day-to-day governance of Gaza.
Since a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel began on October 10, Gaza has been divided by a so-called “Yellow Line” beyond which Israeli forces are stationed and which leaves the military in control of just over half of the territory.
“Currently, we operate only in areas under Hamas control,” said Abu Ashraf Barbah, a merchant who before the war supplied food items across the territory of more than two million Palestinians.
“The Hamas ministry is the one that deals with traders and controls the markets, while the Hamas police carry out campaigns against tax evaders,” he added.
The newly-formed Palestinian technocratic body is primarily mandated to oversee civilian services such as health, education and municipal affairs.

- In the markets, on the streets -

Phase two of Trump’s Gaza ceasefire plan, which the UN Security Council endorsed in November, stipulates that Hamas should disarm and the Strip’s day-to-day governance be handed over to the technocratic committee.
But Israeli officials say Hamas still has around 20,000 fighters in Gaza and several thousand rockets.
The return to some form of public order is one of the challenges of the second phase, which the United States launched last month.
Concrete results have been slow to materialize.
While waiting for the transitional authority to take shape, Gaza’s existing police force — which answers to Hamas authorities — has returned to the streets since the ceasefire took effect.
AFP journalists reported that uniformed, armed police have deployed at major intersections, hospital entrances and government buildings, directing traffic and regulating markets.
With many police stations destroyed during Israeli air strikes, some units have resumed operations from temporary tents, residents said.
For traders, Hamas’s influence is most visible.
“The one controlling everything in Gaza’s economy is Hamas,” said 41-year-old merchant Samir Abu Adnan.
“Hamas has started collecting taxes, the ministry of economy publishes daily price lists, and the police and ministries are still affiliated with Hamas,” he said.
Several traders confirmed to AFP that civil servants were collecting taxes in markets and shops, relying on police enforcement in cases of non-compliance.

- ‘Hamas controls the levers’ -

In rare testimony to the media, a police captain in Gaza City told AFP that the force would maintain law and order regardless of who formally governs the territory.
“We are a police force that carries out the government’s instructions,” the 44-year-old officer said, declining to be identified for security reasons.
“We do not care who will be in the political leadership of the government,” he added.
“What matters to me is that the incoming government is not affiliated with the occupation,” he said, referring to Israel.
“If the committee takes over Gaza, we will help it.”
But there is uncertainty over how the transitional technocratic committee would be deployed in the territory and what would happen to the current police force.
Amani Ashtiwi, a teacher living in a tent in central Gaza, said the committee would need “very strong support from the Palestinian Authority, Egypt and America to be able to govern Gaza.”
“The committee faces a long and difficult road because Hamas controls the levers of life in Gaza,” Ashtiwi added.
For merchant Abu Adnan, Hamas still “holds the power.”
“If the committee takes over, it will need Hamas’s approval for every decision,” he said.