Who is the "de facto" ruler of Qatar?


Tamim bin Hamad came to power as the Emir of Qatar, following his father’s, Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, abdication on 25 June 2013. Since then, Qatar’s Emir became a toy in Hamadein’s hands, turned him into a tool subject to their whims.

Hamad Bin Khalifa still rules from behind the scenes, leading destruction schemes. He must approve any spent sum that exceeds 1 bil riyals and controls who takes sovereign ministries and important posts.

Hamad Bin Jassim control sovereign posts, rules over Tamim because he controls the economy. He funded Muslim Brotherhood arms and welcomed them in Qatar after June 30.

Yusef Al-Qaradawi is the strife sheikh who controls Tamim and who ordered him to welcome extremists in Doha and forced him to spread Brotherhood’s ideas in Qatari curriculums.

Known for his close relationship with the Qatari royal family, Azmi Bishara, a former member of the Israeli Knesset led the Qatari media plan to spread chaos, through Al Jazeera channel.

Bishara’s power increased, and according to the website “Qatari Leaks”, he started to give advice to the Amiri Diwan (the governmental headquarters of Qatar), as well as consultations to some of the Qatari media.

Azmi Bishara, was once leading inciting campaigns against the Arab countries through Al-Jazeera TV screens, realized that his battle was over, after everyone discovered the ugly face of Qatar, so he announced his retirement from politics, which viewed by some as a confession of his service for the Qatari regime for years.

Now, as Qatar is experiencing a profound economic crisis, the government of Doha issued Treasury bills to the country's debt markets worth 600 million Qatari rials ($165 million). 

In addition, Qatar's markets have suffered an accelerated fall in liquidity, especially foreign markets, which has led the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank of Qatar to turn to international debt markets to provide liquidity to its citizens.

As a result, according to economic experts and official data, in 2020, the Qatar Stock Exchange general index fell by 0.47%, losing 46.60 points to close at 9767.18 points, which is not good news for the Qatari economy.

Instead of allocating funds to healthcare, services and working to attract fleeing foreign investors, the royal family continues to spend large sums of money and use the kingdom's resources to fund yellow media organizations and numerous articles relating to sensitive political issues.

Rewards for Qatari citizens are cut off in exchange for increased spending and financial support to Islamic scholars like Yousef al-Qaradawi. 

Qataris are getting paid to spread controversial ideas about Hamas and other terrorist groups, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and other scenarios where Doha is directly involved, such as Syria, Yemen, Libya, and Somalia.

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