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Alex Brummer

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

Opinion

Serious symptoms of Qatar

June 6, 2014 11:27
2 min read

Qatar's allegedly corrupt campaign to host the World Cup tournament in 2022, exposed over seven pages in the Sunday Times, provides insight into one of the most troubling of the Gulf statelets. The often disturbing policies carried out by the ruler Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, who succeeded his father in 2013, have placed it at odds which many of the other Gulf nations and much of the advanced world.

In the past, Qatar has used its vast wealth, based on some of the richest natural gas reserves anywhere, to invest in Western assets.

It owns Harrods outright, has strategic share interests in grocer J Sainsbury and the London Stock Exchange and is a big investor in UK property from the Shard to the Olympic Park and the Chelsea Barracks.

In recent times, it has been in a struggle with the proprietors of the Daily Telegraph, the Barclay brothers, for control of some of London's most famous hotels, including Claridge's and the Connaught.