Qatar cuts off tongues of its citizens to prevent criticism against ruling regime
Qatar has eliminated the last outlet for freedom of
expression internally by issuing a law that punishes with imprisonment and a
fine anyone who publicly deals with the public affairs of the state, inside or
outside, or broadcasts, publishes, or re-publishes false or tendentious news,
statements, rumors, or exciting propaganda. This brought Amnesty International to
assert that Doha has limited freedom of expression and permanently eliminated
it in the country.
Limiting freedom of expression
Amnesty International revealed that a new law in Qatar
criminalizes publishing “false or tendentious” statements, which may significantly
reduce freedom of expression, stressing that the new law is a worrying reversal
of the commitments Qatar made in 2018, when it ratified the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which a total of 173 states have
ratified.
Lynn Maalouf, Research Director for the Middle East Program
at Amnesty International, said that Qatar already has a set of repressive laws,
but this new legislation deals another bitter blow to freedom of expression in
the country and is a flagrant violation of international human rights laws. “It
is extremely worrying that the Emir of Qatar approves legislation that can be
used to silence peaceful critics,” she said, noting that the clause published
in Qatar’s Official Gazette doubles the penalty “if the crime occurs in
wartime.”
In a report by the Maat Foundation for Peace, Development
and Human Rights, she said that it is a confirmation of the role played by the
Qatari state in interfering in the affairs of many countries under the guise of
human rights and highlighting its keenness to promote human rights conditions
and defend freedoms in various countries of the world. Doha issued new
legislation No. 2 for the year 2020 by amending some provisions of the Penal
Code promulgated by Law No. 11 of 2004, to completely eliminate the remaining
freedom of opinion and expression inside Qatar or for its citizens abroad, and
to erase what Doha claims of its support for freedom of opinion and expression
in various countries.
No freedoms
Maat added in a report titled "New Qatar Legislation
Eliminates the Last Breath for Freedom of Expression" that the law
criminalizes any statement or action that, in one way or another, opposes or
contravenes Doha's policies in general and establishes a set of penalties,
including imprisonment for a period of up to five years and a fine of up to 100,000
Qatari riyals (about $27,000) for everyone who exercises his right to expression,
whether inside or outside Qatar, under the guise of "stirring up public
opinion", through a set of broad terms that include almost every saying
contrary to the directions of the state.
Qatari circumvention
Maat explained in its report that this law confirms the
circumvention of the Qatari constitution to protect freedom of opinion and
expression, adding that while the Qatari constitution refers in its articles
46, 47, and 48 to the freedom of the individual to address public authorities,
as well as guaranteeing freedom of opinion and scientific research and freedom
of the press, printing and publishing. However, the constitution itself
tampered with guaranteeing these rights by writing a text in accordance with
the conditions specified by the law, meaning that the freedom of opinion and expression
guaranteed by the Qatari constitution is not activated, because it is linked to
other laws, including the Qatari Penal Code, which was amended at the beginning
of 2020 to impose broad restrictions on this right. The law was written in
loose form, lacking the slightest guarantees of freedom of expression, and it
was specifically designed to abuse opponents and to prevent any opinions that
might be opposed in one way or another to the policies of the Emir of Qatar. Among
the expressions contained in the amendments that raised the concerns of Qataris
is the handling of public affairs, sensational propaganda, destabilization,
tendentiousness, stirring up public opinion, and harming the regime, all of
which are loose terms that can be used to abuse the opposition. There is no
precise interpretation of the term dealing with the public affairs of the
state, for example, except that the law allows the security authorities to
abuse every person who speaks about the public affairs of the state and becomes
subject to the punishment prescribed in the law, without specifying what the public
affairs of the state are. No guarantees have been put in place for this talk,
and therefore it is the most dangerous material mentioned by the law and
completely eliminates the concept of freedom of opinion and expression within
Qatar.
Europe delegation
During a conference held in Doha on support for freedoms,
the European Union delegation raised concerns about the Cybercrime Prevention
Law in Qatar, and the special representative of the European Union for Human
Rights, Eamon Gilmore, expressed concern about Qatari laws related to the press
and freedom of expression.
At a conference in Doha calling for the protection of
activists on social media, Gilmore said, "I am concerned about some laws
related to freedom of expression and the press." He called on Qatar to
abolish many laws that limit freedom of expression, citing the 1979 press law
that regulates the licensing of publications and allows officials to request
corrections to news.
Under the law, publications can be suspended for up to three
months if they publish news deemed to be in conflict with the public interest,
and Gilmore said that he raised these concerns with the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and the National Human Rights Committee in Qatar.



