Showing posts with label Qatar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Qatar. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

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California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

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California couple gets three years in jail in Qatar for death of adopted child

Thursday, November 28, 2013

The Daily Show - Qatar stadium

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The Daily Show - Qatar stadium

Saturday, October 5, 2013

The World Cup Socker in Qatar (2022), Controversy over Appalling Migrant Worker Conditions


L’homme de l’année 2011 : L’Emir du Qatar, Hamad Ben Khalifa al Thani, le nouvel Air and Field Marshall du Monde arabe


Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani is Qatar’s Emir [image left]. He heads a despotic monarchical rogue state.


He maintains supreme power. What he says goes. Ordinary Qataris have no say.


State terror defines official policy. Qatar has one of the world’s worst human and civil rights record.


Torture and other forms of repression are commonplace. So is brutal worker exploitation. Foreign nationals suffer most.


 According to the State Department’s 2012 human rights report:


“The principal human rights problems were the inability of citizens to change their government peacefully, restriction of fundamental civil liberties, and pervasive denial of expatriate workers’ rights.”


“The monarch-appointed government prohibited organized political parties and restricted civil liberties, including freedoms of speech, press, and assembly and access to a fair trial for persons held under the Protection of Society Law and Combating Terrorism Law.”


“Other continuing human rights concerns included restrictions on the freedoms of religion and movement, as foreign laborers could not freely travel abroad.”


“Trafficking in persons, primarily in the labor and domestic worker sectors, was a problem.”


“Legal, institutional, and cultural discrimination against women limited their participation in society.”


“The noncitizen “Bidoon” (stateless persons) who resided in the country with an unresolved legal status experienced social discrimination.”



Migrants comprise the vast majority of Qatar’s two million population. London’s Guardian ran a series of articles explaining more.


The International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) chose Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup games.


FIFA president Sepp Blatter did so disgracefully. He ignored outrageous exploitation foreign construction workers face. More on that below.


Qatar is a key US regional ally. Doha hosts America’s forward CENTCOM (US Central Command) headquarters. It’s based at Al Udeid Air Base. It’s home for 5,000 US forces.


It’s a hub for US Afghanistan and Iraq operations. Qatar was instrumental in Obama’s Libya war. Its special forces armed and trained extremist Islamist militants.


 They included the CIA affiliated Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG). They’re ideologically allied with Al Qaeda.


In December 2004, the State Department designated it a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO). If doesn’t matter. America uses Al Qaeda and likeminded organizations as enemies and allies.


Qatar supports Obama’s war on Syria. It helps recruit extremist fighters. It provides funding, weapons and training. It’s part of Washington’s plan to oust Assad.


London’s Guardian headlined “Qatar: one migrant worker’s story.”


 Nepalese worker Bhupendra Malla Thakuri “borrowed money to afford a recruitment agent’s fees (for) a job as a truck driver in Qatar…”


 It pays 1,200 riyals monthly (about $ 330). In June 2011, Bhupendra was severely injured. His leg was crushed on the job. He was hospitalized for months.


“When I was discharged,” he said, “the company only paid me for the 20-odd days I had worked that month, but nothing more.”


 ”They didn’t give me my salary. They didn’t give me anything. It was a very critical situation. I was injured and my leg had become septic.”


 His company gave him a document in English to sign. It asked him to agree to return to Nepal. It declared all his benefits paid.


He refused to sign, saying:


 ”I had to return to the hospital frequently for checkups, but I didn’t have money for that. I needed money for transportation and medicine. There was no money for food.”



 His indebtedness rose to about $ 4,400. He had no way repay. He sued. He was lucky. He got significant compensation. On July 29, he went home.


 According to Amnesty International Gulf migrant researcher James Lynch:


“Bhupendra’s case illustrates both the callousness with which so many companies treat migrant workers in Qatar, but also the laborious and confusing processes which migrant workers are expected to navigate in order to get their rights.”


“It took him more than two years, and enormous stamina and courage, to get the compensation he deserved, during which time he was penniless.”



On September 25, the Guardian headlined “Revealed: Qatar’s World Cup ‘slaves.’ Exclusive: Abuse and exploitation of migrant workers preparing emirate for 2022.”


They endure outrageous human rights abuses. In recent weeks, dozens of Nepalese migrant workers died.


“(T)housands more (endure) appalling labour abuses, a Guardian investigation has found, raising serious questions about Qatar’s preparations to host the 2022 World Cup.”



During summer 2013, “Nepalese workers died at a rate of almost one a day.”


 Many were young men. Sudden heart attacks killed them. Others died from accidents. Human life in Qatar is cheap.


 Guardian investigators “found evidence to suggest that thousands of Nepalese, who make up the single largest group of labourers in Qatar, face exploitation and abuses that amount to modern-day slavery.”


From June 4 – August 8, at least 44 workers died. Heart attacks or workplace accidents took most of them.


Other damning evidence uncovered included:


  • forced labor on World Cup infrastructure;

  • withholding pay for some Nepalese workers for months; allegedly it’s to prevent them from running away;

  • confiscating worker passports; doing so reduces their status to illegal aliens; and

  • denying workers access to free drinking water in summer heat.

“About 30 Nepalese sought refuge at their embassy in Doha to escape the brutal conditions of their employment,” said the Guardian.


Rogue Qatari officials are very much involved in ruthless migrant worker exploitation.


“The overall picture is of one of the richest nations exploiting one of the poorest to get ready for the world’s most popular sporting tournament,” the Guardian added.


It shows FIFA’s complicity with brutal police state repression. It doesn’t surprise. Formula One’s governing body includes Bahrain on its calendar.


It does so despite the Gulf monarchy’s appalling human rights record.


Murder, torture, other forms of abuse, lawless arrests, kangaroo court trials, and longterm imprisonments don’t matter.


Bahrain Grand Prix races are held as scheduled. Formula One’s Bernie Ecclestone operates like FIFA’s Sepp Blatter. Money, lots of it, prestige, and self-interest alone matter.


State terror is a small price to pay. Welcome to Qatar and Bahrain. They’re two of the world’s most repressive dictatorships. They’re valued US allies. They’re complicit in America’s imperial wars.


One migrant Qatari worker told Guardian investigators:


“We’d like to leave, but the company won’t let us. I’m angry about how this company is treating us, but we’re helpless.”


“I regret coming here, but what to do? We were compelled to come just to make a living, but we’ve had no luck.”



Guardian investigators found migrant workers sleeping 12 to a room. Filthy conditions made many sick.


Some were forced to work without pay. They were left begging for food and clean water. Ran Kuman Mahara said:


“We were working on an empty stomach for 24 hours; 12 hours’ work and then no food all night.”


“When I complained, my manager assaulted me, kicked me out of the labour camp I lived in and refused to pay me anything. I had to beg for food from other workers.”



Nearly all Nepalese migrant workers have huge debts. They accrued them to pay recruitment agents for their jobs.


They’re obligated to repay. They have no way to do so. They had no idea how brutally they’d be exploited.


They held against their will in forced bondage. They’re treated callously. Dozens are worked to death.


Nepalese ambassador to Qatar, Maya Kumari Sharma, called the emirate an “open jail” for foreign workers. It’s that and much more.


According to Anti-Slavery International director Aidan McQuade:


 ”The evidence uncovered by the Guardian is clear proof of the use of systematic forced labour in Qatar.”


 ”In fact, these working conditions and the astonishing number of deaths of vulnerable workers go beyond forced labour to the slavery of old where human beings were treated as objects.”


“There is no longer a risk that the World Cup might be built on forced labour. It is already happening.”


Qatar has the world’s highest ratio of migrant workers to domestic population. Over 90% of its workforce are aliens. From now until 2022, another 1.5 million will be recruited.


Based on current conditions, they’ll be held in forced bondage. They’ll be brutalized against their will.


They’ll be lawlessly held to build stadiums, roads, ports, and hotels, as well as other infrastructure and facilities in time for FIFA’s 2022 World Cup games.


Nepal supplies about 40% of Qatar’s migrant workers. In 2012, over 100,000 were recruited. They had no idea how brutally they’d be treated.


 On the one hand, FIFA officials insist on acceptable labor standards conditions and practices. On the other, they turn a blind eye to appalling abuses.


It bears repeating. Money, lots of it, prestige, and self-interest alone matter. It doesn’t surprise. Olympism operates the same way.


 It’s more about profiteering, exploitation, and cynicism than sport. In modern times, it’s always been that way.


 It’s dark side excludes good will and fair play. Scandalous wheeling, dealing, collusion, and bribery turns sport into a commercial grab bag free-for-all.


Marginalized populations are exploited. Thousands are evicted and displaced. Disadvantaged residents are left high and dry.


Cozy relationships among government officials, corporate sponsors, universities, and IOC bosses facilitate exploiting communities, people, and athletes unfairly. It’s standard practice.


FIFA operates the same way. Denial of fundamental rights and freedoms is ignored. Readying venues for scheduled events come first.


Repression and worker abuses don’t matter. High-minded hyperbole conceals what demands condemnation.


CH2M Hill is a leading consulting, engineering, construction, program management firm. It “was recently appointed the official programme management consultant to the supreme committee,” said the Guardian.


It claims a “zero tolerance policy for the use of forced labour and other human trafficking practices.”


According to its engineering subsidiary Halcrow:


“Our supervision role of specific construction packages ensures adherence to site contract regulation for health, safety and environment.”


 ”The terms of employment of a contractor’s labour force is not under our direct purview.”



Nepalese worker explain otherwise. They’re virtual slaves. They want to leave but can’t. According to one unnamed migrant:


“We’d like to leave, but the company won’t let us. If we run away, we become illegal and that makes it hard to find another job.”



Qatar’s labor ministry lied claiming it enforces strict standards and practices. According to the Guardian:


“The workers’ plight makes a mockery of concerns for the 2022 footballers.”



General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions head Umesh Upadhyaya said:


“Everyone is talking about the effect of Qatar’s extreme heat on a few hundred footballers.”


“But they are ignoring the hardships, blood and sweat of thousands of migrant workers, who will be building the World Cup stadiums in shifts that can last eight times the length of a football match.”



They turn a blind eye to the appalling human rights abuses they endure. They’re held in forced bondage for Qatari/FIFA profits, self-interest and prestige.


Doing so makes a mockery of sport. Illusion substitutes for reality. Dark side truth explains best.


Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at [email protected]


His new book is titled “Banker Occupation: Waging Financial War on Humanity.”


http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanII.html


Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.


Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.


It airs Fridays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.


http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour


http://www.dailycensored.com/appalling-migrant-worker-conditions-qatar/




Global Research



The World Cup Socker in Qatar (2022), Controversy over Appalling Migrant Worker Conditions

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Pressure builds on Qatar after ‘migrant workers abuse’ exposed



Published time: September 28, 2013 14:46



Labourers work at a construction site in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Stringer)



Download video (22.81 MB)



The United Nations has condemned Qatar for failing to comply with an international convention banning the use of forced labor, as the 2022 World Cup host faces a barrage of criticism following a report on slavery-like mistreatment of migrant workers. 


The UN’s International Labor Organization (ILO) says Qatar is failing to implement an international convention banning the use of forced labor. According to one of the provisions in the document, its signatories (Qatar joined the convention in 2007) have to inspect workplace conditions to ensure the rights of workers are not infringed upon. 


The criticism comes after an investigative report in The Guardian newspaper, exposing conditions faced by migrant workers in the country that are akin to slave labor. The report revealed that at least 44 Nepalese construction workers died in Qatar Between June 4 and August 8. 


Sharan Burrow, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, described Qatar as a “slave state” in an interview with RT. According to the Confederation’s  estimates, 400 Indian and Nepali migrant workers die in Qatar every year and that figure is expected to grow to at least 600 as the country employs larger numbers of migrant workers to construct facilities for the 2022 World Cup. Burrow has drawn a grim picture of what life is for foreign contractors in the Gulf state. 


Foreign workers wait for their bus at a construction site in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Fadi Al-Assaad)


“Workers are exploited from the moment they are forced to pay money to recruitment agencies in Nepal, India, Philippines and other Asian or African nations. They sign a contract, and they go to Qatar. Often their contract is torn up and they are paid as little as $ 400 a month,” Burrow said. “Many of them are skilled workers. They are forced to live in squalor at those labor camps where you have 8, 10, 12 or sometimes more living in one room. They are often abused and underpaid. The work is dangerous. More than one worker a day will die in Qatar. And yet even if they want to leave, they can’t do it. They are basically owned by the employer, who has to sign an exit visa or indeed a transfer of working rights. Their passports are often held against the law. It’s appalling – and frankly, it could be fixed. We’ve offered the government solutions; they have no political will to fix it.”


In response to the accusations, Qatar’s Labor Ministry said it had strict rules governing working conditions and the prompt payment of salaries, but numerous human rights activists believe the existing laws are not being implemented. 


One such activist is Nicholas McGeehan, a Gulf researcher at Human Rights Watch. He says the report was no surprise to him as he warned in 2010 – right after Qatar won its bid to host the World Cup – that the victory would lead to “the systematic exploitation of the country’s migrant workforce and the possible enslavement of thousands if not hundreds of thousands, of impoverished south Asian migrant workers.”


Labourers work at a construction site in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Stringer)


“In Qatar and across the Gulf the labor system and the legal framework fall totally short of the standards required, that there are series of appalling laws, which allow for the exploitation of workers, such as the kafala system of sponsorship-based employment,” McGeehan told RT. “And the laws which do exist to protect workers – for example the law prohibiting passport confiscation, the law prohibiting illegal recruitment fees – these laws aren’t enforced. Nor for that matter are any of the offenders prosecuted criminally. So, there is effective impunity for the employers – most of them Qatari – which results in horrific abuses.”


Aidan McQuade, director of Anti-Slavery International, has accused Qatar authorities of negligence based on racism. He believes the international community has to step in and force Qatar to fundamentally change its legal system. 


“I suspect the core issue here is racism. It’s that truly the government of Qatar doesn’t care about those who are in such an appalling situation,” McQuade told RT. “And that’s at the core of a lot of contemporary slavery issues. I don’t want to see a boycott, I don’t want to see Qatar being stripped of the World Cup. I would like to see the World Cup being used as a mechanism for changing the situation. Now that they have the World Cup, the imperative is upon FIFA and indeed upon the rest of the world to insist that this World Cup is not constructed on slavery.”  


Construction workers rest during their lunch break in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Stringer)


Some politicians and activists would like to see the 2022 World Cup boycotted, however. British Conservative MP Damian Collins is among the supporters of this extreme measure.


“I think that FIFA and the international football community should say to Qatar that this is completely unacceptable,” Collins told RT.  “Unless you can demonstrate how you’ve put this right and the actions been taken for the abuses that have been committed so far, we’ll take the tournament away from you and open the competition up again. That should be the threat they have. If FIFA won’t do that, the pressure should come from the major competing nations that will be expecting to be taking part in that World Cup and say we won’t play in Qatar until these issues are resolved.”


The Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee, the body tasked with organizing the World Cup, earlier said it was concerned with the allegations of workers’ mistreatment. It also stated that the Qatari government was conducting an investigation into the accusations.


Football’s governing body FIFA is expected to discuss the issue of forced labor in Qatar during its scheduled meeting in Zurich next week.




RT – News



Pressure builds on Qatar after ‘migrant workers abuse’ exposed

Pressure builds on Qatar after ‘migrant workers abuse’ exposed



Published time: September 28, 2013 14:46



Labourers work at a construction site in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Stringer)



Download video (22.81 MB)



The United Nations has condemned Qatar for failing to comply with an international convention banning the use of forced labor, as the 2022 World Cup host faces a barrage of criticism following a report on slavery-like mistreatment of migrant workers. 


The UN’s International Labor Organization (ILO) says Qatar is failing to implement an international convention banning the use of forced labor. According to one of the provisions in the document, its signatories (Qatar joined the convention in 2007) have to inspect workplace conditions to ensure the rights of workers are not infringed upon. 


The criticism comes after an investigative report in The Guardian newspaper, exposing conditions faced by migrant workers in the country that are akin to slave labor. The report revealed that at least 44 Nepalese construction workers died in Qatar Between June 4 and August 8. 


Sharan Burrow, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, described Qatar as a “slave state” in an interview with RT. According to the Confederation’s  estimates, 400 Indian and Nepali migrant workers die in Qatar every year and that figure is expected to grow to at least 600 as the country employs larger numbers of migrant workers to construct facilities for the 2022 World Cup. Burrow has drawn a grim picture of what life is for foreign contractors in the Gulf state. 


Foreign workers wait for their bus at a construction site in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Fadi Al-Assaad)


“Workers are exploited from the moment they are forced to pay money to recruitment agencies in Nepal, India, Philippines and other Asian or African nations. They sign a contract, and they go to Qatar. Often their contract is torn up and they are paid as little as $ 400 a month,” Burrow said. “Many of them are skilled workers. They are forced to live in squalor at those labor camps where you have 8, 10, 12 or sometimes more living in one room. They are often abused and underpaid. The work is dangerous. More than one worker a day will die in Qatar. And yet even if they want to leave, they can’t do it. They are basically owned by the employer, who has to sign an exit visa or indeed a transfer of working rights. Their passports are often held against the law. It’s appalling – and frankly, it could be fixed. We’ve offered the government solutions; they have no political will to fix it.”


In response to the accusations, Qatar’s Labor Ministry said it had strict rules governing working conditions and the prompt payment of salaries, but numerous human rights activists believe the existing laws are not being implemented. 


One such activist is Nicholas McGeehan, a Gulf researcher at Human Rights Watch. He says the report was no surprise to him as he warned in 2010 – right after Qatar won its bid to host the World Cup – that the victory would lead to “the systematic exploitation of the country’s migrant workforce and the possible enslavement of thousands if not hundreds of thousands, of impoverished south Asian migrant workers.”


Labourers work at a construction site in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Stringer)


“In Qatar and across the Gulf the labor system and the legal framework fall totally short of the standards required, that there are series of appalling laws, which allow for the exploitation of workers, such as the kafala system of sponsorship-based employment,” McGeehan told RT. “And the laws which do exist to protect workers – for example the law prohibiting passport confiscation, the law prohibiting illegal recruitment fees – these laws aren’t enforced. Nor for that matter are any of the offenders prosecuted criminally. So, there is effective impunity for the employers – most of them Qatari – which results in horrific abuses.”


Aidan McQuade, director of Anti-Slavery International, has accused Qatar authorities of negligence based on racism. He believes the international community has to step in and force Qatar to fundamentally change its legal system. 


“I suspect the core issue here is racism. It’s that truly the government of Qatar doesn’t care about those who are in such an appalling situation,” McQuade told RT. “And that’s at the core of a lot of contemporary slavery issues. I don’t want to see a boycott, I don’t want to see Qatar being stripped of the World Cup. I would like to see the World Cup being used as a mechanism for changing the situation. Now that they have the World Cup, the imperative is upon FIFA and indeed upon the rest of the world to insist that this World Cup is not constructed on slavery.”  


Construction workers rest during their lunch break in Doha, Qatar (Reuters / Stringer)


Some politicians and activists would like to see the 2022 World Cup boycotted, however. British Conservative MP Damian Collins is among the supporters of this extreme measure.


“I think that FIFA and the international football community should say to Qatar that this is completely unacceptable,” Collins told RT.  “Unless you can demonstrate how you’ve put this right and the actions been taken for the abuses that have been committed so far, we’ll take the tournament away from you and open the competition up again. That should be the threat they have. If FIFA won’t do that, the pressure should come from the major competing nations that will be expecting to be taking part in that World Cup and say we won’t play in Qatar until these issues are resolved.”


The Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee, the body tasked with organizing the World Cup, earlier said it was concerned with the allegations of workers’ mistreatment. It also stated that the Qatari government was conducting an investigation into the accusations.


Football’s governing body FIFA is expected to discuss the issue of forced labor in Qatar during its scheduled meeting in Zurich next week.




RT – News



Pressure builds on Qatar after ‘migrant workers abuse’ exposed

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Qatar urges prisoner release as Egypt mediation hopes fade




Supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi hold up posters, including Egypt


1 of 3. Supporters of deposed Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi hold up posters, including Egypt’s army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (L) that reads, ”A murderer,” during a protest at the Rabaa al-Adawiya square where they are camping, in Cairo, August 6, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Mohamed Abd El Ghany






CAIRO | Wed Aug 7, 2013 5:24am EDT



CAIRO (Reuters) – Egypt must release jailed Muslim Brotherhood leaders to help end political turmoil following the overthrow of Islamist President Mohamed Mursi, Qatar’s foreign minister said as international mediation efforts to avert more bloodshed appeared to be fading.


Khaled al-Attiya, who has been trying to mediate an end to the crisis along with envoys from the United States, European Union and United Arab Emirates, returned home on Wednesday after several days in Cairo.


“My wish for the brothers in Egypt is to release the political prisoners as soon as possible because they are the key to unlocking this crisis,” he told Qatar-based Al Jazeera television in an interview.


Qatar was the main financial backer of Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood-dominated government which ruled Egypt for a turbulent year until a July 3 military takeover backed by massive street demonstrations.


“Without a serious dialogue with all the parties, and most importantly with the political prisoners because they are the main element in this crisis, I believe things will be difficult,” Attiya said.


His comments echoed those of two senior U.S. senators who, after talks in Cairo on Tuesday, forecast bloodshed within weeks unless the new authorities released prisoners and began a national dialogue including the Brotherhood. Their warning drew an official rebuke and Egyptian media outrage.


The Dutch foreign minister was the latest foreign emissary due to hold talks with his Egyptian counterpart, the prime minister and the president and other officials on Wednesday as time appeared to be running out for a diplomatic solution.


Fears that Mursi was trying to establish an Islamist autocracy, coupled with a failure to ease economic hardships afflicting most of Egypt’s 84 million people, led to mass street protests, triggering the army intervention.


Almost 300 people have been killed in political violence since the overthrow, including 80 shot dead by security forces on July 27.


Mursi’s supporters have been staging sit ins and two areas of Cairo to demand his reinstatement. Egyptian authorities have said their patience has limits.


TALKS ON THE ROCKS


Prospects of a negotiated end to the crisis looked to be on the rocks on the last day of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, with the army-installed government reportedly ready to declare that foreign mediation efforts had failed.


However a person directly involved in the mediation effort told Reuters: “It’s still open. We are still trying.”


State-run Al-Ahram newspaper, citing official sources, said the government would make an announcement to that effect soon.


The paper said the authorities would also declare that Muslim Brotherhood protests were non-peaceful – a signal that the government intends to end them by force.


Interim head of state Adly Mansour, installed by the military after Mursi’s ouster, was due to address the nation later on Wednesday ahead of the Eid al-Fitr Muslim feast which begins on Thursday. Egypt traditionally closes down for several days for the Eid.


A military source had earlier said the interim government and army were mulling the possibility of releasing Muslim Brotherhood detainees in a bid to end the turmoil.


But now that the judiciary has taken up the cases and set trial dates for top Brotherhood leaders, it may be difficult for army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who toppled Mursi, to offer releases.


It may be easier to release the head of the Brotherhood political party, Saad al-Katatni, who like Mursi is under judicial investigation but has not been charged.


The country’s first freely elected president, Mursi is now being detained at an undisclosed location and thousands of his supporters remain camped out at two protest sites in Cairo.


The al-Ahram report doused hopes of a breakthrough, with the government-owned media casting the blame on what it called the intransigence of Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood.


The newspaper said the interim government would announce “the failure of all U.S., European, Qatari and UAE delegations in convincing the Brotherhood of a peaceful solution to the current crisis”.


Asked to comment on the newspaper report, a senior U.S. State Department official in Washington said: “We are still committed to our ongoing efforts at calming tensions, preventing violence and moving toward an inclusive political process.”


Two U.S. senators who visited Cairo on Tuesday, Lindsey Graham and John McCain, called on the military to release political prisoners and start a national dialogue to return the country to democratic rule.


“I didn’t know it was this bad. These folks are just days or weeks away from all-out bloodshed,” Graham told the CBS network.


(Additional reporting by Sami Aboudi in Dubai; Editing by Paul Taylor)





Reuters: Top News



Qatar urges prisoner release as Egypt mediation hopes fade

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Karzai, angry over Taliban"s Qatar office, quits peace, security talks


(CNN) — Afghanistan has suspended security talks with the United States, Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s office said Wednesday.


“In view of the contradiction between acts and the statements made by the United States of America in regard to the Peace Process, the Afghan government suspended the negotiations,” his office said.


Washington has been negotiating a bilateral security agreement with Afghanistan which would dictate the terms of an extension for U.S. troops past 2014 and could provide the basis for any future NATO role.




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Karzai, angry over Taliban"s Qatar office, quits peace, security talks