• Home
  • Qatar: Exiled sheikh Promoted by Saudi Arabia Now in Kuwait

Qatar: Exiled sheikh Promoted by Saudi Arabia Now in Kuwait

An exiled Qatari sheikh once promoted by Saudi Arabia as a possible opposition leader amid a diplomatic dispute with Doha is now in Kuwait, authorities said Wednesday, after he had alleged that the United Arab Emirates was holding him against his will.

It’s the latest chapter in Sheikh Abdullah bin Ali Al Thani’s mysterious travels, after he appeared in an online video on Sunday, following months of silence, to say the UAE wouldn’t allow him to leave. Abu Dhabi has denied that, saying he was free to go where he pleased.

However, it only added fire to an ongoing dispute that saw the UAE allege this week that Qatari fighter jets “intercepted” two Emirati commercial airliners, something denied by Doha.

Qatar’s National Human Rights Committee told The Associated Press on Wednesday that Sheikh Abdullah was in Kuwait and “will undergo health check-ups.” The committee said it confirmed that with the sheikh’s family.

Kuwaiti media reported that the sheikh arrived late on Tuesday night to Kuwait City, his flight greeted by an ambulance and a convoy of vehicles that took him to a military hospital.

Kuwait’s Information Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Sheikh Abdullah was little-known until the Qatar diplomatic crisis erupted last June, with Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE cutting off Doha’s land, sea and air routes.

The Saudis then began suggesting Sheikh Abdullah should rule Qatar as an emir in exile, while Saudi-funded television networks provided him coverage. A quickly created Twitter account in his name amassed hundreds of thousands of followers. However, the last tweet on the account came in October and Sheikh Abdullah has not been publicly seen for some time.

He remerged with an online video Sunday, immediately aired by Doha-based news network Al-Jazeera.

In it, Sheikh Abdullah says he was invited to Abu Dhabi as a guest of “Sheikh Mohammed,” apparently a reference to Abu Dhabi’s powerful crown prince, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, who enjoys strong ties to Saudi Arabia’s rulers.

“I am a guest of Sheikh Mohammed but it is not hosting now, it is now an imprisonment,” Sheikh Abdullah says in the video. “They told me not to leave and I am afraid something will happen to me and they blame Qatar.”

“I just wanted to let you know that Qatar is innocent in this and I am being hosted by Sheikh Mohammed and anything that happens to me after this is under his responsibility,” he adds.

 

 

Read full article by Hussain Al-Qatari and Jon Gambrell from AP on The Washington Post, January 17, 2018

Perspectives: Turkey-Gulf Relations in Erdoğan’s Next Term

May 30, 2023

Turkey and Saudi Arabia: A “Manageable Competition” Sinem Cengiz Non-Resident Fellow, Gulf International Forum; Research Assistant, Gulf Studies Center of Qatar University Turkish-Saudi relations are…

Reflecting on the Turkey-Qatar Partnership, Fifty Years Later

May 22, 2023

In 2023, Turkey and Qatar are to celebrate 50 years of full diplomatic ties, providing an opportunity for both nations to reflect on the evolution…

Qatar-Bahrain Relations: Prioritizing Progress Despite Complicated History

April 25, 2023

In recent months, the Middle East and North Africa region has seen notable progress towards normalization and peace. The diplomatic activity between Saudi Arabia and…

Subscribe to Receive Latest Updates from GIF.