Google – AFP, Taieb Mahjoub (AFP), 24 June 2013
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Qatari Emir
Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani in Doha, on June 23, 2013
(AFP/File, Bertrand
Langlois)
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DOHA —
Qatar's emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani is to transfer power in the
small but economically powerful Gulf nation to his son Sheikh Tamim, the
official QNA news agency reported on Monday.
"The
royal palace announces that Qatar's emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani,
will address the Qatari people at 8:00 am (0500 GMT) on Tuesday," said a
statement carried by the official QNA news agency.
An official
said the emir will "announce the transfer of his powers to his son".
The palace
statement declared Tuesday an official holiday.
Qatar-based
satellite television channel Al-Jazeera said the emir met "with the royal
family and prominent members of Qatari society. He has informed the meeting of
his decision to hand power over to his crown prince."
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Qatari
Crown Prince Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani
smiles after arriving in Manama,
on June 24, 2013 (AFP/File,
Mohammed al-Shaikh)
|
Al-Jazeera
reported earlier that the emir's planned meeting with royals and prominent
members of society "comes amid news about the intentions of the emir to
transfer power to his heir apparent, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani".
A diplomat
said that by stepping down of his free accord the 61-year-old emir would
"score a first in the Arab world," where autocratic rulers held power
uncontested for decades until the Arab Spring revolutions that toppled regimes
in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya.
Crown
Prince Sheikh Tamim, born in 1980, is the second son of the emir and his second
wife Sheikha Mozah.
He is
deputy commander of the armed forces and head of the National Olympic
Committee, which is in charge of hosting the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
Diplomats
said that over the past three years the emir has increasingly handed over
military and security responsibilities to Tamim, who like his father was
educated at the British military academy Sandhurst.
"The
emir is convinced that he should encourage the new generation. He plans to
transfer power to the crown prince, Sheikh Tamim, and to carry out a
ministerial reshuffle to bring a large number of young people into the
cabinet," a Qatari official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
"The
emir could take a step back, that is to say not retire completely but play a
more honorary role, so that his son can better assume the responsibilities and
become the man in charge," a French diplomat said.
A Qatari
official said that in any case the emir "will continue to play an
influential backstage role and keep an eye on Qatar's investments abroad."
The emir
has developed Qatar into a political powerhouse and an economic giant with
multi-billion investments scattered across the world.
The tiny
Gulf peninsula holds the world's third largest gas reserves and produces
roughly 77 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas per year, making it the
world's largest supplier.
Analyst
Neil Partrick, an expert on the Gulf, ruled out major changes in Qatar.
Sheikh
Tamim has two wives and six children. Muslim tradition allows men to take up to
four wives.
"Tamim
already has responsibilities for sensitive foreign portfolios among other
matters," said Partrick.
"For
Qatari foreign policy, none of this seems likely to produce major change. The
young heir apparent Tamim is unlikely to effect major changes without
consulting his father."
Qatar took
part in the armed intervention in Libya and actively supports rebel forces who
are trying to topple the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
It has
major investments around the world, including in the French football club Paris
Saint-Germain, in hotels, in a resort on the Italian island of Sardinia, as
well as stakes in automobile company Volkswagen, energy giant Total and
Britain's Barclays Bank.
The Gulf
state also controls a powerful media empire through Al-Jazeera, the first
pan-Arab satellite channel which has branched out into English, and earlier
this year bought Current TV, a struggling US cable channel, in preparation for
the launch of Al-Jazeera America.
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Sheikh
Tamim (left) was named heir apparent by Sheikh Hamad
(right) in 2003
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