Qatar says Europe will need international help if Russia cuts gas

Qatar's energy minister told the EU on Tuesday that his country couldn’t rescue Europe alone if Russia turned off gas supplies amid spiking tensions over Ukraine. (Reuters)
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Updated 01 February 2022
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Qatar says Europe will need international help if Russia cuts gas

  • Saad al-Kaabi, told EU Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson that Qatar was ready to help Europe "in times of need"
  • The US has raised the possibility of Qatar, one of the world's leading gas producers, supplying Western European nations in talks

DOHA: Qatar’s energy minister told the European Union on Tuesday that his country could not rescue Europe alone if Russia turned off gas supplies amid spiking tensions over Ukraine.
But the minister, Saad Al-Kaabi, told EU Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson that Qatar was ready to help Europe “in times of need.”
The United States has raised the possibility of Qatar, one of the world’s leading gas producers, supplying Western European nations in talks, officials said.
The Ukraine crisis was a key topic in a meeting on Monday between US President Joe Biden and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani.
In a video conference, Kaabi told the EU official that Qatar hoped the tensions in Europe could be resolved through diplomacy.
“Qatar stands ready to support our partners around the world in times of need,” he said.
But “the volume of gas needed by the EU cannot be replaced by anyone unilaterally, without disturbing supplies to other regions around the world. Europe’s energy security requires a collective effort from many parties,” he added.
Qatar has said it is already working at full production and experts have said Europe could only get emergency supplies if key customers in East Asia, including Japan and South Korea, agreed to divert some of their consignments.
The United States has also spoken with Australia about providing gas and could provide its own natural gas.
Without mentioning any special deliveries, Kaabi said Qatar was proud “to have never missed a single cargo delivery for the last 25 years to all our partners around the world.”
“Keeping our contractual word is sacrosanct in Qatar, and therefore we have the full trust of our global commercial partners and buyers.”
Industry experts have warned that European consumers, already reeling from high prices for natural gas, would have to pay even more for the special deliveries.


US detainees in Iran risk becoming collateral damage in war, families and supporters fear

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US detainees in Iran risk becoming collateral damage in war, families and supporters fear

  • “For Americans imprisoned in Iran, this is about as terrifying a moment as it gets,” said Namazi, an Iranian American who was detained for nearly eight years
  • The US government would not confirm how many Americans are being held in Iran

NEW YORK: Families and supporters of Americans detained in Iran say their loved ones face new dangers during the intensifying war, including the risk of becoming unintended casualties of Israeli and American bombardment or victims of retaliation from Iran’s repressive regime.
“For Americans imprisoned in Iran, this is about as terrifying a moment as it gets,” said Siamak Namazi, an Iranian American who was detained for nearly eight years before being released as part of a deal with the US in 2023. “What these families are facing now is days of war with no clear end in sight.”
The US government would not confirm how many Americans are being held in Iran, but the James W. Foley Legacy Foundation, a hostage advocacy organization, said there are six and that they face “unprecedented danger” because of the military conflict.
The known cases include a reporter formerly based in Washington and a Jewish Iranian American from New York who traveled to Iran last year for family reasons and hasn’t been permitted to return to the US
At least two of the known detainees are housed in Evin Prison, the notorious Tehran penitentiary where Namazi was held, according to representatives for the individuals. The high-security facility holds many of the Islamic Republic’s political prisoners and has been the target of past Israeli bombardment.
Kamran Hekmati, a 61-year-old from Long Island detained at Evin, spoke with his wife on Monday, a few days into the war, to assure her that he was safe for now, according to Shohreh Nowfar, his cousin.
But the family worries his condition could quickly deteriorate because he hasn’t been receiving regular treatments for his bladder cancer in the months since he was detained, she said.
“It’s an uncertain time in an uncertain country,” said Nowfar, a Los Angeles resident.
Trump administration calls for detainees’ release
Ryan Fayhee, a lawyer for Reza Valizadeh, an Iranian American reporter also detained at Evin, said he’s stressed the urgency of the moment in his regular talks with White House and State Department officials.
Israel’s military has taken to social media in recent days to warn residents living near the prison that they should evacuate amid the continuing airstrikes. The families of other foreign nationals imprisoned at Evin have told European news outlets that bombs have been hitting close enough to the detention center to blow out windows.
“It’s my job to let the administration and the Israeli government know that there are innocent American citizens within that prison,” Fayhee said. “They should take great care with this military action to avoid any unfortunate collateral damage.”
White House and State Department officials declined to respond to specific questions about the status of the detainees out of concern for their safety and security, but called on Iran to immediately release them.
“President Trump has been clear that he wants every American wrongfully detained to be returned home safe and sound, and that there will be dire consequences for regimes who treat Americans as political pawns,” said Anna Kelly, a White House spokesperson.
Valizadeh is among at least 15 reporters currently jailed in Iran, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
The 50-year-old fled the country in 2009 after reporting on its pro-democracy protests, according to a petition his lawyers submitted to the United Nations in January.
Valizadeh obtained US citizenship in 2022 while working in Washington for Radio Farda, the Persian-language arm of Radio Free Europe, which receives US government funding.
He was detained in 2024 after returning to Iran to visit his elderly parents and sentenced to 10 years in prison on charges that he was collaborating with the US government.
The US has since officially designated Valizadeh as wrongfully detained, a classification that moves a case under the supervision of the State Department’s special presidential envoy for hostage affairs, the government’s chief hostage negotiator.
Americans imprisoned on dubious charges
Among the other Americans whose plight has become public is Afarin MoHajjer, a California resident originally from Iran.
She was detained in September and charged with posting propaganda critical of the Islamic Republic on social media and insulting its Supreme Leader and Islam, according to her son Reza Zarrabi, a political activist who lives in Germany.
Zarrabi didn’t immediately respond to messages seeking comment this week, but he has told European media outlets that his mother isn’t politically active and that he believes she was arrested to silence his outspoken opposition to the regime.
Hekmati’s family, meanwhile, is convinced the New York City jewelry business owner is just the latest victim of Iran’s “hostage diplomacy.”
The country for decades has detained Americans in the hopes of securing the release of Iranians locked up in the US or exacting concessions from Washington. Just last week, the US sought to impose costs on Iran for hostage-taking, with the State Department a day before the conflict began designating the country as a state sponsor of wrongful detention.
Nowfar said her cousin, Hekmati, left Iran after the 1979 revolution but has returned several times without issue.
Then in May, Iranian authorities stopped him at the airport, seized his passport and forbade him from leaving the country. He was eventually charged under an Iranian law that makes it illegal to have visited Israel within the past 10 years.
Hekmati’s family maintains that his last trip to Israel was some 13 years ago for his son’s Bar Mitzvah. They also dispute espionage-related charges that accuse him of having met with Mossad agents.
“They just wanted to have a hostage. An American hostage,” Nowfar said.
There are also concerns that Hekmati’s faith exposes him to further mistreatment, says Kieran Ramsey, the chief investigative officer at Global Reach, a nonprofit working on Hekmati’s case.
“He’s not only American, he’s also Jewish — and we had had some concerns early on in this case of him” getting bullied, said Ramsey, who previously led the US government’s Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell.
As for Namazi, he sympathizes with families seeking solace, recalling a chaotic 2022 fire that killed at least eight inmates during his time at Evin.
“I remember the smoke, the confusion, and the total absence of reliable information,” the 54-year-old Washington resident said. “For us prisoners it was terrifying. My mother says that night was one of the hardest she endured.”