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Al Jazeera: Qatari emir Sheikh Hamad to step down

Wikipedia. :lol:

Goes to show the level of IQ of desert dwellers.

Bangladeshis are not "Indians" in the same way that Arabs are not "camels".

Who do you think "made us" Muslims in the first place?

Allah (SWT) of course.

Any MUSLIM will say that, only the Kuffar will say otherwise.

Nevermind, a desert dweller thinks that like in his desert full of camels, everybody else in the world is a 'sectarian tribal desert dweller'. We do not have any such sectarian issues like desert dwellers.

And, lastly, worry about the argument without dragging Bangladesh in to it. You live in deserts, and have always lived in deserts. "Worry about your king's thobe" I could have jested, but I do not.

Stop your ad hominems, and most importantly, Qatar is a puppet. Let's not change the topic.

The thread topic is not Bangladesh, but a camel loving king handing power over to another camel lover.
 
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Jordanian king is very short so it looks funny
 
Your nonsense makes no sense. Fix your own mess before meddling in matters that do not concern you. Last time I checked you have plenty to do in your Bangladesh. We can add washing toilets, jungle etc. if you want to play that game. We have tropical areas on the Arabian Peninsula too so feel free to include a jungle for my part. I have no problem with that, at least we are a diverse region.

The Middle East and Semitic civilizations are still much older and influential than anything that have come out of your country. Tiny Qatar, as I mentioned, yields more influence than your country. Must be why you are so hurt.

Did not know that Hejaz or Yemen was desert. Yemen famous for its natural beauty, diversity, unique architecture, ancient history and civilizations, mountains (known as the Switzerland of the Arab world) etc.

Nor Hejaz for that matter which is another very diverse region.

@al-Hasani

Just report him bro, plz don't stoop down to his level.

Let him bark. Nobody cares anyway. His ignorance says it all.
 
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May Allah (swt) bless King Abdullah II of Jordan. A really knowledgeable, friendly, warm person and great Muslim, Arab and Hashemite leader.

Let the envious ignorants call him a "puppet" for serving his people and making improvements for Jordan and keeping it stable despite many odds against Jordan and having limited resources and being located in a hostile area.

The role of Jordan in the Syrian conflict, especially by hosting so many hundred of thousands Syrians and their help put many of us other Arabs to shame IMO!
 
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Talking about looks, like that has any significance on politics, then you are at least without your Ahmadinejad dwarf who topped the list of strangest creatures among the world's politicians.

WHAT?? Dont tell me that you dont want to get with this!

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:woot:
 
June 26, 2013

Profile: Qatar prime minister Shaikh Abdullah Bin Nasser Al Thani

He holds degrees in policing science and law

Shaikh Abdullah Bin Nasser Al Thani, Qatar’s new prime minister, was the country’s Minister of State for Internal Affairs from 1995 to 2013.

He holds degrees in policing science from Durham Military College, UK, and in law from Beirut University.

According to his biography, he started his police career as an officer of patrols at the Rescue Police Section in 1985. He was regularly promoted until he was appointed minister of state for Interior Affairs in February 2005.

His biography says that he completed more than 23 qualifying and specialised training courses at home and abroad in the field of Special Forces.

Shaikh Abdullah, 43, is married and has five children.

As prime minister, he will replace Shaikh Hamad Bin Jasem Al Thani, who also served as Qatar’s foreign minister.

As minister, he has regularly stated the significance of international dimensions for Qatar’s policies.

In a speech at the 79th Interpol general assembly in Doha in 2010, he said that “Qatar has very quickly understood that the keys to success lay in closer co-operation and co-ordination between countries, in the sharing of information and best practices between experts from different countries and backgrounds, as well as in the signing of international conventions and treaties”.

Profile: Qatar prime minister Shaikh Abdullah Bin Nasser Al Thani | GulfNews.com
 
June 25, 2013

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Profile: Shaikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani

The new Emir of Qatar will follow the policy forged by his father and the prime minister

As Shaikh Tamim, the 33-year-old new Emir of Qatar, receives tribal notables to accept their allegiance, many are asking how he will shape the future of a society transformed by his father’s modernising 18 year-rule.

Shaikh Hamad is leaving power at 61 after turning a near-bankrupt Gulf backwater into one of the world’s richest nations, using its gas receipts to become a global investor and diplomatic player.

Educated in the UK at Sherborne public school and Sandhurst military college, Shaikh Tamim’s career has been rooted in the military and security services. In recent years, he has taken on an increasingly public role as his father groomed him for the handover of power.

Shaikh Tamim has taken on a bigger foreign affairs role, handling Qatar’s tricky relations with Gulf superpower Saudi Arabia and post-Gaddafi Libya.

A keen sportsman, Shaikh Tamim has oversight over many of Qatar’s sporting pursuits, playing a role in the successful bid to host the World Cup in 2022, failed attempts to win the right to host the Olympic Games and the purchase of a Paris St Germain football club.

As the outgoing emir abdicated, he called on his son to preserve Qatar’s cultural identity, and its links to the Arab world and religion.

Many Qataris believe that preserving national identity in a fast-changing society will be a focal point for Shaikh Tamim as he balances between modernity and tradition.

Married twice with six children, few expect the young emir to instil radical changes.

But different personalities and priorities on the fringes of policy could emerge as a younger cabinet is named later this week.

“The broad strokes of Qatari policy are well established, but that leaves much room for interpretation led by the new emir,” says David Roberts of the Royal United Services Institute in Doha.

Observers say that, politically, Shaikh Tamim may emerge as a more conservative, risk-averse figure than his father, attuned to the conservative forces that run deep in society while aware of the need to update the country’s outdated bureaucracy and legal system.

As Qataris become an ever-decreasing minority in their own land, many are calling for the promotion of traditional ideals, such as limiting the sale of alcohol and promoting Arabic language in education, as a counterweight to the country’s greater openness as a new Gulf hub for finance, tourism, culture and sports.

Some have argued Shaikh Tamim is more religious and willing to see a greater role for religion in daily life, saying this has led to Qatar’s increasing promotion of political Islam in Egypt and Syria.

However, most observers in Doha say Shaikh Tamim is a pragmatist who will follow the policy forged by his father and the prime minister, Shaikh Hamad Bin Jassim Al Thani.

They have used the rise of political Islam to further Qatar’s regional objectives, betting that the Muslim Brotherhood will become an even more potent force for decades to come.

While the new emir may not roll back previous policies, Qatar’s leading regional role may still be diminished, especially if — as expected — the powerful prime minister is relieved of his foreign affairs brief.

Many observers say such a domestic reorientation may be welcome as the country embarks on its next great economic boom.

If the past decade was marked by fast growth based on gas development, a new period of rapid infrastructure development is coming as Doha prepares

New contracts have already been awarded for the creation of a metro system and new roads as the country forges ahead with the building of museums and a new city in Lusail, where the final of the World Cup in 2022 is scheduled to take place.

His father’s legacy was to use Qatar’s new-found wealth to put the state on the global stage.

Shaikh Tamim will now have to define the trajectory of this young, conservative country under the harsh spotlight of global scrutiny.

Profile: Shaikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani | GulfNews.com
 
One of the four wive Mosa is nothing but a b!!ch who called him to topple his father, ban him from coming to Qatar, took his some other three wives sons to prison and one mental illness as an excuse to ensure musa's son to be a prince after Khalifa. That's why I hate that btch. Elder son supposed to be a prince. Fk them but khalifa's foreign policy is the only thing we like
 
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