Qatar Charity UK’s projects in Britain and in Europe
In 2014, with the help of a £99,151 ($120,000) loan from AMAL, Qatar
Charity opened an office in London “because of the need for direct supervision
of Qatar Charity projects in Britain and in Europe generally, especially with
the development of these projects and their increase in size,” according to
Chairman Sheikh Hamad bin Nasser Al Thani.
He said more than QR500 million ($137 milllion) had been spent since
2010 on projects in Europe, “which has included a number of projects for the
benefit of the Muslim communities there”.
The new office’s managing director, Salman Kaldari, said the primary
goal was to support the social and economic progress of the most disadvantaged
in the UK and other European countries, but in reality the London outfit
appears from company documents to be more focused on Islamic projects. QCUK’s website is currently suspended, but
elsewhere it has described itself as “a non-faith-based charity that is focused
on making a sustainable and meaningful impact to communities regardless of
religion, ethnicity, gender or colour. However, the charity also receives and
distributes donations that are specifically earmarked for projects related to
Ramadan and other Islamic traditions.”
During its first full year of operations, 2014-15, QCUK’s income was
£4,457,191 ($5,447,935), of which 99.5% consisted of grants from Qatar Charity
in Doha. £3,979,451 of the total took
the form of restricted donations, of which just 3.1% was spent during the year;
a further 5.1% was accounted for by a net loss on foreign exchange. £85,400 from Doha was spent on helping local
organisations in the UK to provide Ramadan meals for the poor in the community,
and £38,768 of Doha money was used to alleviate food shortages among the
Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar (a cause also strongly promoted by Qatar’s
Al Jazeera TV). Money from general
unrestricted funds was used to help establish a centre for rape victims in
Bosnia. Also, under the working name of
‘Nectar Trust’, QCUK partnered with Mosaic, a youth project of the Prince of
Wales’s charitable trust, as part of a strategy to build relations with
reputable charities and other organisations.
The unspent 92% of restricted funding, which is to be disbursed once due
diligence processes are complete, was earmarked for projects including:
£2,139,139 for three “community centres”, two in the UK and one in
Europe, including facilities for marriage functions, sports and day care
centres, prayer areas, shops, and classrooms for teaching Arabic; £802,437 for the IEHS imam-training centre
at Chateau Chinon in France £695,696 for the Emaan Trust in Sheffield,
northern England, founded in 2004 with the objective of “establishing a major
Islamic centre”, which has twice been visited by Dr Ahmed al-Hammadi of Qatar
Charity’s Ghaith Initiative, most recently in July 2016; one of Emaan’s
trustees, Ahmad al-Rawi, was formerly president of the UOIE; £92,933 for Swansea University Campus; and £61,576 for a multipurpose centre in
Mulhouse, northern France; the money was due to be reassigned, once permission
from Doha was confirmed, as the trustees decided after due diligence not to go
ahead with the project.
In addition, £3,188 – a rather small amount for a major humanitarian
charity, and also unspent – was earmarked for Syrian refugees.
During the financial year 2014-15 QCUK paid back in full the £99,151
loan from AMAL; the trustees’ annual report duly noted that QCUK’s
director-general, Ayyoub Abouliaqin, was an AMAL trustee. It also noted, under ‘related party transactions’,
that QCUK’s chairman, Yousef al-Kuwari, was CEO of Qatar Charity in Doha, and
that one of QCUK’s other trustees, Mohammad al-Ghamdi, was the Doha charity’s
executive director for international development. Since February 2016 there have been no
British trustees on the board, and al-Ghamdi has stepped down, leaving Yousef
al-Kuwari in charge along with fellow-Qataris Mohammed Saadon al-Kuwari and
Salah Ahmed al-Hammadi.
Qatar Charity and its UK operation, which has the blessing of the Qatari
embassy in London, clearly has big ambitions.
QCUK’s stated vision is to be “the main charitable partner for Qatari
investors in UK and Europe” and “provide opportunities for Qatari investors and
businesses in the UK and elsewhere to demonstrate and increase the
effectiveness of their corporate social responsibility”. While broadly philanthropic in nature,
however, its plan of work is also strongly oriented to spreading and
strengthening the Qatari brand of the Islamic faith in Europe, and hardly
transparent about doing so. We will
discuss further below whether, or to what extent, activities of this kind
should give rise to concern.



