Arab News

Fake news: Qatar hails support of British MP who was not even there

Alistair Carmichael’s office confirms he did not visit the Gulf state — despite the official news agency’s claim to the contrary

- ANNA PUKAS

The Peninsula daily, quoting Qatar’s state-run news agency QNA, claimed Alistair Carmichael MP led the All-Party Parliament­ary Group (APPG) visit to Qatar two weeks ago. But Carmichael’s office on Wednesday said he did not make the trip.

“He wasn’t there,” said the MP’s assistant from his office in the House of Commons in London. Just to make certain, he added: “I can confirm he wasn’t there.”

On its website on Feb. 15, the Qatari daily ran a QNA report claiming a British “parliament­ary delegation” had “praised the efforts of Qatar in the field of protecting and enhancing workers’ rights.”

Plaudits were supposedly heaped upon Doha during the delegation’s meeting with Ali bin Samikh Al-Marri, chairman of Qatar’s National Human Rights Committee (NHRC).

While the meeting may have taken place, Carmichael was not in the room — or even in the country. A photograph of the meeting published on The Peninsula’s website was taken from so far away that it is impossible to distinguis­h the MPs who were present.

Carmichael, the Liberal-Democrat chief whip in the House of Commons, is chairman of the British-Qatar Group in Parliament and has visited the country on at least one occasion.

Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs footed the bill for flights, accommodat­ion and food, which came to between £51,000 ($71,330) and £52,500, for a three-day visit in February 2016.

The group has not yet published an account of benefits received in 2017.

Asked how Carmichael might feel about being misreprese­nted in what amounts to fake news, the MP’s office said the report in The Peninsula was “strange.”

It is not the first time Qatari media outlets have issued false reports about UK politician­s visiting the country.

The Qatar News Agency (QNA) in September claimed that the “British Parliament­ary Inquiry Committee” had been “charged by the British Parliament to investigat­e the violations of the siege imposed on the State of Qatar.”

But no committee of that name exists, and the UK Parliament made no order for such a visit, officials confirmed to Arab News last year.

Earlier this month, there were further false claims and inaccuraci­es regarding a visit to Qatar by British MPs last September under the auspices of the NHRC.

It was reported that following their visit, 15 British MPs signed a petition calling for the blockade on Qatar to be lifted, and submitted it to Prime Minister Theresa May. But one of the signatorie­s, Martyn Day of the Scottish National Party, explained that in reality, what the British MPs signed was an early day motion.

This is a proposal, submitted by a member of Parliament, for a debate in the House of Commons at the earliest opportunit­y, but stipulatin­g no fixed time. The main purpose is to draw attention to a particular subject — at least briefly, since early day motions are rarely debated.

Day’s office told Arab News: “This was a parliament­ary motion to show concern about the blockade on Qatar and the impact of that blockade on the residents and citizens of those in Qatar and their human rights.”

But it did not amount to a petition to the prime minister, as claimed by Qatar’s NHRC.

A statement by the committee dated Feb. 3 said the British MPs visited the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs to learn about a "ban" on Qataris performing Hajj — a blatant falsehood.

Far from preventing Qataris from performing the holy pilgrimage, King Salman had invited Qatari pilgrims to travel to the Kingdom on Hajj at his own expense and ordered private jets to be sent to Doha to transport Qatari pilgrims to the holy sites.

The land border between Saudi Arabia and Qatar at Salwa was opened and Qatari pilgrims were allowed to pass through with no electronic permits required.

The NHRC’s claims about the British MPs’ concerns over the humanitari­an situation in Qatar were also undermined by the inclusion of some elementary errors, such as referring to the House of Commons — the lower chamber of the British Parliament — as “the British House of Representa­tives.”

It also misspelled both the first and family name of the prime minister as “Teresa Mai.”

LONDON: When a Qatari newspaper boasted that a group of visiting British politician­s had praised Doha’s record on workers’ rights, there was just one problem: The British MP named as leader of the delegation was not even in the country at the time.

 ??  ?? A photograph of the meeting was taken from so far away that it is impossible to distinguis­h the MPs who were present. (The Peninsula)
A photograph of the meeting was taken from so far away that it is impossible to distinguis­h the MPs who were present. (The Peninsula)

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