Qatari sheikh says ‘detained’ in UAE
DOHA: A controversial member of Qatar’s royal family says he is being detained in the UAE, media reported on Sunday, sparking a quick denial by Emirati officials.
Sheikh Abdullah bin Ali Al-Thani, a little-known royal, emerged as a key figure in the dispute between the Gulf states in the weeks after Riyadh and Abu Dhabi cut ties with Doha in June.
He is seen by some as a potential challenger to the Qatari leadership.
A video circulating online, also broadcast by Qatar-based Al-Jazeera television, shows the sheikh warning that he was “afraid something could happen to me that will be blamed on Qatar”.
“I am now in Abu Dhabi, where I was a guest of (UAE crown prince) Sheikh Mohammed” bin Zayed al-Nahyan, Sheikh Abdullah said.
“That is no longer the case. I am now detained. I want to make clear that the people of Qatar are innocent,” he said.
“Sheikh Mohammed bears full responsibility for anything that happens to me.”
The UAE denied that Sheikh Abdullah was being held against his will, with state news agency WAM reporting he was in the country “at his own behest”.
“Sheikh Abdullah has had unrestrained mobility and freedom of movement during his stay in the UAE,” WAM cited an unnamed foreign ministry official as saying.
“Subsequently Sheikh Abdullah had expressed his desire to leave the UAE following which all measures were taken to honour his desire without any reservation.”
Ali Rashed al-Nuaimi, who heads the UAE’s Hedayda counter-extremism centre, meanwhile tweeted that Sheikh Abdullah had asked to stay in the Emirates “for his own safety”.
“For the record, a trusted source confirmed that Sheikh Abdullah bin Ali AlThani is free to leave the UAE as he likes and to whatever destination he likes,” Nuaimi wrote.
Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and Bahrain severed diplomatic and trade ties with Qatar in June over allegations that Doha supported extremists and had close ties to regional rival Iran. Doha denies the accusations. In response to the video, Qatar’s foreign ministry spokesman Lulwa alKhater said Doha was monitoring the situation. – AFP