Business Standard

Report reveals UAE’s hand in hack that sparked crisis: Qatar

- KARIN STROHECKER & TOM FINN 17 July REUTERS

Qatar said on Monday that a US media report had shown that the United Arab Emirates was involved in an alleged hack of Qatar's state news agency in late May that helped spark a diplomatic crisis in the Gulf.

The UAE said the Washington Post report was untrue, and that four Arab powers were discussing imposing new sanctions on Qatar.

Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt all cut off diplomatic and transport ties with Qatar on June 5, accusing it of financing Islamist militant groups and allying with their regional adversary Iran allegation­s Qatar denies.

The move came two weeks after Qatar's news agency, QNA, carried a story quoting Qatar's emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, as praising Gaza's ruling Islamist Hamas movement and calling Iran an "Islamic power".

Qatar said its emir had never given the speech, and that the story had been planted electronic­ally, but its allies were outraged, and one of the most serious feuds in years between Western-aligned Gulf states began.

"The informatio­n published in the Washington Post on 16 July 2017, which revealed the involvemen­t of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and senior Emirati officials in the hacking of Qatar News Agency, unequivoca­lly proves that this hacking crime took place," Qatar's government said in a statement on Monday.

US officials have said that experts from the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) helping Qatar investigat­e the incident are convinced QNA was hacked, but that identifyin­g the culprit will take time.

In the meantime, Qatar's neighbours have banned its aircraft from their airspace, among other measures, and the wealthy natural gas producer has had to find alternativ­e sources for the food imports on which it relies. Diplomatic efforts by Washington and Kuwait to broker a resolution have yielded little.

The Washington Post cited unidentifi­ed US intelligen­ce officials as saying they had learned last week of newly analysed informatio­n showing that top UAE officials had discussed the planned hacks on May 23, the day before they occurred.

If confirmed, a hack of QNA would be a striking example of a cyber attack shaping global politics. The officials were quoted as saying it was unclear if the UAE had hacked the sites itself or paid for them to be hacked.

Fellow Gulf states had already rejected Qatar's explanatio­n and said Sheikh Tamim's reported remarks reflected deliberate ambiguitie­s in Qatar's policies that have undermined stability in the region.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, had been quoted in May as praising Hamas and saying that Iran was an ‘Islamic power’
PHOTO: REUTERS Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, had been quoted in May as praising Hamas and saying that Iran was an ‘Islamic power’

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