Nectar Trust: Qatar’s tool to penetrate UK
Under the guise of humanitarian aid, Qatar has exploited
charitable foundations to support the most dangerous extremist organizations in
the world, especially funding the activities of the Brotherhood, and to establish
a foothold in Europe.
Qatar Charity has been Doha’s greatest tool to penetrate
Europe. In 2012, a branch was established in Britain, and it officially
launched in 2014. But Doha then changed the name of the institution from Qatar
Charity UK to Nectar Trust, in an attempt to mislead and to repel the
suspicions that surround it.
Nectar Trust has been involved in financing extremist and
radical groups. According to reports, Doha used political money to earn loyalty
and buy support, but later turned the foundation into a safe haven to finance
terrorism and transfer money around the world easily and conveniently. From
2007 to 2017, Doha spent more than €120 million on projects in Europe,
especially in Britain.
According to the Guardian, former Nectar Trust CEO Yousef al-Kuwari,
a former Qatari official, was involved in establishing a website calling for
racist attacks on the basis of belief. He stepped down as CEO in 2018, and then
one of his former advisers, Yousuf al-Hammadi, took over the position. However,
Kuwari held the same position in the parent institution in Doha, which was
included on the lists of terrorism by the Arab Quartet countries in 2017.
The institution's name was changed to Nectar Trust in order
to hide the link to the parent organization in Doha, which is known to be
supportive of radical groups, especially the Brotherhood, as well as to
distance the foundation’s connection to Kuwari.
Nectar dis-Trust
The UK Charity Commission, which provides oversight for
charities in Britain, expressed its concerns about the independence of Nectar
Trust in the country, which provides millions of pounds to mosques and other organizations
throughout Britain. It was later listed as a terrorist organization in a number
of countries in the Middle East in 2017.
Five years ago, the Charity Commission began taking moves
against the foundation after it was revealed that 98% of Qatar’s funding in
Britain comes from Nectar Trust. In 2014, Nectar Trust received money transfers
worth £451,605
from the parent association in Doha.
In 2015, the oversight authority revealed its concern about
all the trustees of the charity in the United Kingdom and their association
with the parent institution in Doha, knowing that three of the seven members of
its board are Qatar Charity managers or employees and receive their salaries
from the Doha headquarters, while the remaining four have relations with it.
In 2017, the Telegraph revealed that a Kuwaiti person
involved in planning the September 11, 2001 attacks was supervising the
construction of a mosque in Sheffield that was funded by Nectar Trust, although
this person was excluded from taking the position of director of the mosque.



