Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
International

Qatar sheltering Al Qaeda financiers: US official

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Nov, 2014 10:49 AM
    A top US official has accused Qatar of sheltering two financiers of the global terror network, Al Qaeda, media reported Sunday.
     
    David Cohen, the US Treasury under-secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said that the two alleged paymasters of global terrorism were “living freely” in the Gulf state, the Daily Mail reported. 
     
    Cohen confirmed the presence of Khalifa Muhammad Turki al-Subaiy and Abd al-Rahman bin Umayr al Nuaymi in Doha in a speech in Washington, the transcript of which was obtained by the Sunday Telegraph.
     
    “There are US and UN-designated terrorist financiers in Qatar (who) have not been acted against under Qatari law,” Cohen said.
     
    He accused Qatar and its neighbour Kuwait of being “permissive jurisdictions for terrorist financing”.
     
    However, the US Treasury said that it could not disclose further classified information on the two alleged terror financiers, the report said, citing the Sunday Telegraph.
     
    Al-Nuaymi was added to a list of suspects targeted with financial sanctions in Britain in October after the country's government confirmed that he was banned from doing business in Britain.
     
    It comes 10 months after the US authorities imposed sanctions on him, saying that al-Nuaymi was a “terrorist financier and facilitator who has provided money and material support and conveyed communications to the Al Qaeda and its affiliates in Syria, Iraq, Somalia and Yemen for more than a decade”.
     
    The US Treasury said he was “considered among the most prominent Qatar-based supporters of Iraqi Sunni extremists” and “reportedly oversaw the transfer of over $2 million a month to (the) Al Qaeda in Iraq (over) a period of time”. 
     
    Al-Nuayami, on his part, has denied breaking the law and maintained that he was being persecuted over criticism of his US policy in the region. 
     
    On the other hand, Al Subaiy, a former employee at the Qatari Central Bank, “provided financial support to Al Qaeda” on behalf of the group's senior leaders, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, according to the US.
     
    It is held that he lived freely in the Gulf state for a number of years in the '90s while he was wanted for terrorist offences in the US. 
     
    The pair is accused of raising millions of dollars for Al Qaeda and other jihadi groups and sending it to the terror group in Syria and Iraq.
     
    It is alleged that both men have been kept out of jail owing to their links with figures of authority in Qatar.
     
    Qatar, however, insists that it did not support jihadis fighting in Syria and Iraq and operating out of the Gulf. 
     
    Ironically, the country introduced a designated terrorist list, but not one person has been added to it so far.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    UN seeks Eid truce as Gaza toll hits 835

    UN seeks Eid truce as Gaza toll hits 835
    The toll in the ongoing Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip has escalated to 835, with more than 5,300 injured, officials said Friday even as UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called for a ceasefire during the Muslim holiday of Eid ul-Fitr.

    UN seeks Eid truce as Gaza toll hits 835

    No survivor in Algerian plane crash, probe launched

    No survivor in Algerian plane crash, probe launched
    Algeria Friday declared a three-day national morning for the victims of the Air Algerie flight AH 5017 that crashed over Mali the previous day with no survivor yet found from the plane wreckage, media reports said.

    No survivor in Algerian plane crash, probe launched

    McDonald's Japan withdraws chicken products of Chinese origin

    McDonald's Japan withdraws chicken products of Chinese origin
    The Japanese subsidiary of McDonald's Friday announced the withdrawal of all its chicken products sourced from China, following the expired...

    McDonald's Japan withdraws chicken products of Chinese origin

    Antarctic fish might survive ocean warming: Study

    Antarctic fish might survive ocean warming: Study
    A species of Antarctic fish might be able to survive the predicted warming of its native waters over the next century if the warming is gradual enough, according to...

    Antarctic fish might survive ocean warming: Study

    MH17 black boxes arrive in Britain

    MH17 black boxes arrive in Britain
     The two black boxes of the crashed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 arrived in Britain Wednesday for analysis, Ukraine's investigation commission said....

    MH17 black boxes arrive in Britain

    Fighting in Gaza will end 'in very near future': UN chief

    Fighting in Gaza will end 'in very near future': UN chief
    UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Tuesday that he believed his talks with world leaders will lead to an end to the ongoing fighting between Israel and Hamas "in the very near future"....

    Fighting in Gaza will end 'in very near future': UN chief