Khaleej Times

Persecuted Qatari tribe demands justice

- Staff Report malzarooni@khaleejtim­es.com

geneva — The people of Al Ghufran tribe of Qatar have called for internatio­nal help to end the persecutio­n of their community by the running affairs in Doha.

In a symposium organised by the Arab Federation for Human Rights on the sidelines of the 37th session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, a delegation of Al Ghufran tribe recounted miserable stories of people of their community.

Nasser Jaber Al Merri, a member of the tribe, said the Qatari authoritie­s revoked his and his family members’ nationalit­y when he was six during a vacation abroad.

The Qatari authoritie­s, he said, had also prohibited them from returning to their home country. He said his father was fired from his job as an engineer at the Qatar Petroleum company.

Jaber said his father’s efforts to communicat­e with the Qatari government on reasons why he was banned from entering Qatar had no result. In the case of Jaber Rashid Al Ghufrani, his nationalit­y was rescinded when he was 11. His

I was born in the USA to a Qatari father and mother, but became stateless without a home or nationalit­y at the stroke of a pen.

Saleh Mohamed Al Ghufrani

father was deprived of all his rights after he served in the Qatari armed forces for 23 long years.

Speaking in a sombre voice, Jaber said three of his brothers were born outside Qatar and they are barred from entering Qatar and ddi not have birth certificat­es.

“When we requested the government to issue the birth certificat­es, we were told that we were not Qatari nationals,” Jeber lamented.

Elaboratin­g further, Jaber said that the Qatari embassy in Saudi Arabia had seized the passports and other Qatari documents he submitted for renewal. They wanted to destroy all evidence of my ties to my homeland, he alleged. He also informed that his father did not have any political connection­s to invite such a vindictive action from the government.

Another member of Al Ghufran tribe, Saleh Mohamed Al Ghufrani, also explained how Qatar had deprived his father and his family of citizenshi­p. He said his and his family members’ nationalit­y was revoked in 1996.

“I was born in the USA to a Qatari father and mother, but became stateless without a home or nationalit­y at the stroke of a pen,” he added.

He also said the Qatari authoritie­s granted his father a grace period of 72 hours to leave Qatar, failing which he was threatened with jail.

His father’s appeals to the authoritie­s to extend the grace period fell on deaf ears,

Saleh begged the human rights organisati­ons and societies around the world to intervene urgently to find a solution to the problems of Al Ghufran tribe.

Replying to a question raised by AbdulAziz Al Khamis, moderator of the symposium, about the reason why Al Ghufran clan members,

How come that a country in this world revokes the nationalit­y of dead people.

Jaber Abdullhadi

despite such intense humanitari­an suffering in Qatar, are still remaining in Qatar. Saleh said that they fear if they left the country, they would not be allowed to reenter the country again.

Mohamad Saleh Al Ghufrani’s story is more heart-rending. His father was detained in the Qatari jail in 1996. He then walked free but was psychologi­cally ill due to what he had suffered during his detainment.

During this period, his family, comprising 9 members, the youngest of whom was 7 years old and oldest was 10 years then, was displaced.

Mohamad said his father had served in the Qatari army and took part in the liberation of Kuwait and gained official certificat­es of appreciati­on, yet he and his family were rewarded with such a punishment.

On May 28, 1996, Mohamad said his family was forcefully displaced, and had their nationalit­y taken away.

Another tribesman Jaber Abdullhadi also recounted the misery of his family and described how the Qatari authoritie­s had stripped his dead father of nationalit­y. He said the main aim was to deprive his descendent­s of the citizenshi­p.

“How come that a country in this world revokes the nationalit­y of dead people,” he wondered.

Jaber says the practices of the Qatari government amount to ethnic cleansing, which is internatio­nally banned, as the government sees each member of Al Ghufran clan as a betrayer, agent, and conniver.

“If somebody committed a crime, he/she must undergo a fair trial, and if convicted he must bear the consequenc­es alone, not all of his family members,” he said.

Jaber summarised the demands of Al Ghufran tribe by saying they are not merely seeking restoratio­n of nationalit­y but are also demanding compensati­on for the extreme human, social and economic suffering the tribe had gone through.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates