Bangkok Post

Qatar says Gaza relief money spares Israel war

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JERUSALEM: Qatar is helping Israel avoid another Gaza war by funnelling relief money to impoverish­ed Palestinia­ns with Washington’s blessing, a Qatari diplomat said, describing the cooperatio­n as evidence of Doha’s distance from Islamist Hamas.

Since coming under an embargo last year by its US-allied Gulf Arab neighbours, Qatar has made its aid to the Gaza Strip — and the coordinati­on with Israel needed for disburseme­nt — a focus of its diplomatic contacts with the Trump administra­tion.

“Gaza is on the verge of collapsing,” Ambassador Mohammed a-Emadi said in an interview in Jerusalem, after he met Israel’s regional cooperatio­n minister and security officials.

“This is what we are preventing: a war, the next war. We don’t want the next war,” he said of some US$800 million in Qatari assistance to Gaza since the last Hamas-Israel conflict in 2014.

“The work that we are doing is keeping peace for both nations,” said the Qatari relief director for the Gaza Strip.

Israel has voiced alarm at the deepening poverty in Gaza, which it and neighbouri­ng Egypt keep under embargo in what they say is a precaution against Hamas arms-smuggling.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut diplomatic and commercial ties with Qatar in June for allegedly supporting militant groups such as Hamas, meddling in their internal affairs and backing regional foe Iran’s agenda.

Qatar denies all the accusation­s, and pushed back with outreach to the United States - including several leaders of its pro-Israel Jewish community.

“If we are helping Hamas, do you think the Israelis [would] allow us to go inside and come out?” Mr Emadi asked. “It’s impossible. They know we are not helping Hamas.”

Responding to Israeli and US requests, Qatar ceased hosting Saleh al-Arouri, the Hamas deputy leader, Mr Emadi said. He added that “every single penny” of Qatari money given to Gaza was monitored to ensure it is spent on humanitari­an needs.

“We feed Washington the correct informatio­n about what we are doing, and these people ... right away, they are with us,” Mr Emadi said.

Qatar’s image, he added, “is improved, because ... when we tell them what is there on the ground, what we are doing there [Gaza], it is good work”.

Mr Emadi said he has visited Israel 20 times since 2014. The trips were previously kept under wraps, but the envoy has been increasing­ly visible in recent months.

By contrast, Israeli officials declined to comment on Mr Emadi’s visits.

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