Dubai security chief calls for
bombing of Al Jazeera
NEWS / UAE
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Khalfan has made several controversial
comments in the past [File: Ahmed Jadallah/
Reuters]
A senior security official in the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) has sparked
outrage after calling for the bombing of
Al Jazeera, the Qatar-based media
network.
In a series of posts on Twitter on
Friday, Dubai Lieutenant General Dhahi
Khalfan launched a scathing attack
against Al Jazeera, accusing it of
provoking a bomb and gun assault on a
mosque in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula
earlier in the day.
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3:41 PM - Nov 24, 2017
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@Dhahi_Khalfan
"The alliance must bomb the machine
of terrorism ... the channel of ISIL, al-
Qaeda and the al-Nusra front, Al
Jazeera the terrorists," the former
police chief and now head of security in
the Emirate told his 2.42 million
followers on the social media site.
"For how long will they [Al Jazeera]
continue to tamper with the security of
Egypt and the Arab world?" he tweeted.
Khalfan then posted an image of Al
Jazeera's iconic logo superimposed in
front of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, head of
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL , also known as ISIS) group, former
al-Qaeda leader Osama bin
Laden, Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah, and 91-year-old Islamic
theologian Yusuf al-Qaradawi.
What Dhahi Khalfan is doing is
incitement to terrorism.
Terrorism is not just limited to
committing a crime, but any act
or statement that paves the way
for a terrorist act or incites it,
and incitement to terrorism is
terrorism itself.
YASER ABUHILALAH, MANAGING DIRECTOR OF
AL JAZEERA ARABIC
Yaser Abuhilalah, managing director of
Al Jazeera Arabic, said Khalfan bore
"full responsibility for any attack
against Al Jazeera and its employees".
"The UAE needs to respond [to
Khalfan's comments]. He's not just an
Emirati citizen but an official in the
UAE government," Abuhilalah told al-
Quds al-Arabi on Saturday.
"He is using a moment of anger and
grief over the terrible attack in Sinai to
fuel his hatred against Al Jazeera.
"What Dhahi Khalfan is doing is
incitement to terrorism. Terrorism is
not just limited to committing a crime,
but any act or statement that paves the
way for a terrorist act or incites it, and
incitement to terrorism is terrorism
itself," he said.
Stoking controversy
Khalfan has made several controversial
comments in the past but has never
been prosecuted under the UAE's anti-
hate speech laws.
In March of last year, he made
headlines after urging Arabs to ally
with Israel against "enemies of the
Middle East" - a veiled attack against
Iran and the region's Shia Muslims.
And earlier this year, the 66-year-old
tweeted his "complete support" for US
President Donald Trump's Muslim ban.
Khalfan railed against Iraqis, Somalis
and Iranians, nationalities included in
the US travel restrictions, calling them
"unproductive groups", mocked the war
and poverty afflicting Iraq, and would
also call on the UAE to annex Qatar ,
referring to it as an "eighth emirate."
The UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and
Bahrain cut ties with Qatar on June 5,
accusing it of supporting "terrorism",
an allegation Doha has vehemently
denied.
As part of the blockade, the UAE made
expressing sympathy towards Qatar a
punishable offence, with a jail term of
up to 15 years and a fine of at least AED
500,000 ($136,000).
On June 22, the Saudi-led group issued
a 13-point list of demands, including
the shutdown of Al Jazeera, the limiting
of ties with Iran and the expulsion of
Turkish troops stationed in the country,
as a prerequisite to lifting the sanctions.
Qatar rejected the demands as an
infringement on its sovereignty.
Since its launch 21 years ago, Al
Jazeera's offices have occasionally been
bombed or shut down in many places,
including Kabul, Baghdad and Gaza.
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