New Era

Qatar releases Kenyan activist: rights groups

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DOHA - A Kenyan security guard, charged by Qatar with receiving money from a “foreign agent” to spread disinforma­tion within the Gulf state, has been released from custody, rights groups said on Wednesday.

Malcolm Bidali, under his pen name Noah, published articles on the plight of migrant labourers working on projects in the gas-rich host of the 2022 World Cup that include infrastruc­ture for the tournament.

“Malcolm is no longer in custody, but faces apparently trumped-up charges in Qatar related to his legitimate activism,” Amnesty Internatio­nal said in a statement on Twitter.

“All charges stemming from his human rights work must be dropped,” it added.

Advocacy group Migrant Rights also confirmed his release.

Qatar said on 29 May that Bidali had been charged with “offences related to payments received by a foreign agent for the creation and distributi­on of disinforma­tion”, following his arrest earlier in the month.

Amnesty Internatio­nal, Human Rights Watch, Migrant-Rights.org, FairSquare and the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre had called for his immediate release.

The rights groups said in a statement last week that Bidali “appears to have been detained for the peaceful exercise of his human rights”, adding that state security officers, Qatar’s secret police, seized him from his home.

The Qatari government and the Kenyan embassy in Doha did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Wednesday.

Internatio­nal organisati­ons frequently criticise the gas-rich nation over the treatment of its hundreds of thousands of foreign workers, mostly from Africa and Asia.

Doha has announced several reforms to its employment regulation­s since it was selected to host the World Cup, although critics say implementa­tion has been patchy.

FIFPRO, the global footballer­s’ union, had said it was “concerned” by the detention of Bidali who “a week before his arrest, spoke to trade union officials about his experience­s of working in the country”.

 ?? Photo: middleeast­eye.net ?? Free… Malcolm Bidali was held for nearly three weeks in solitary confinemen­t by Qatar and has now been charged with receiving money from a “foreign agent” to spread disinforma­tion within the Gulf state has been released from custody.
Photo: middleeast­eye.net Free… Malcolm Bidali was held for nearly three weeks in solitary confinemen­t by Qatar and has now been charged with receiving money from a “foreign agent” to spread disinforma­tion within the Gulf state has been released from custody.

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