Qatar (pronounced
/kʌˈtɑ:r/
kut-TAHR in English[3][4]),
also known as the State of Qatar or locally
Dawlat Qaṭar, is an Arab
emirate in
the
Middle East, occupying the small
Qatar Peninsula on the northeasterly
coast of the
larger
Arabian Peninsula. It is bordered by
Saudi
Arabia to the south; otherwise the
Persian
Gulf surrounds the
state. An oil- and gas-rich nation, Qatar has the second highest
GDP
per capita in the world.[5]
An
absolute monarchy, Qatar has been ruled by the
al-Thani family since the mid-1800s and has since transformed itself from a
poor British protectorate noted mainly for
pearling into an independent state with significant oil and natural gas
revenues. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Qatari economy was crippled
by a continuous siphoning off of petroleum revenues by the
Amir, who had ruled the country since 1972. His son, the current Amir Hamad
bin Khalifa al-Thani, overthrew him in a bloodless coup in 1995. In 2001, Qatar
resolved its longstanding border disputes with both Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.
Etymology
The name may derive from "Qatara", believed to refer to the Qatari town of
Zubara, an important trading port and town in the region in ancient times.
The word "Qatara" first appeared on
Ptolemy's map
of the
Arabian Peninsula.[citation
needed]
In
Standard Arabic the name is pronounced
[ˈqɑtˁɑr], while in the local dialect it is
[ɡitˁar].[6]
In English-language broadcast media within Qatar—for example, television
commercials for
Qatar
Airways and advertisements concerning economic development in Qatar—the name
is pronounced "KA-tar", with a distinct differentiation between the syllables
from the forming of the 't' sound.
History
Recent discoveries on the edge of an island in the West of Qatar indicate
early human presence in pre-historic Qatar. Discovery of a 6th millennium BC
site at Shagra, in the South-east of Qatar revealed the key role the sea (Gulf)
played in the lives of Shagra’s inhabitants. Excavation at Al-Khore in the
North-east of Qatar, Bir Zekrit and Ras Abaruk, and the discovery there of
pottery, flint, flint-scraper tools, and painted ceramic vessels there indicates
Qatar’s connection with the Al-Ubaid civilization which flourished in the land
between the Tigris and the Euphrates during the period of 5th –4th millennium
BC. There had also been a barter-based trading system between the settlements at
Qatar and the Ubaid Mesopotamia, in which the exchanged commodities were mainly
pottery and dried fish.[7]
Islam swept the entire Arabian region in the 7th century. With the spread of
Islam in Qatar, Muhammad sent his first envoy Al Ala Al-Hadrami to Al-Mundhir
Ibn Sawa Al-Tamimi, the ruler of Bahrain, which extended from the coast of
Kuwait to the south of Qatar, including al-Hasa and Bahrain Islands, in the year
628, inviting him to accept Islam as he had invited other kingdoms and empires
of his time such as Byzantium and Persia. Mundhir, responding to the Prophet’s
call, announced his conversion to Islam, and all the inhabitants of Qatar became
Muslim, heralding the beginning of the Islamic era in Qatar.
In medieval times, Qatar was more often than not independent and a
participant in the great
Gulf–Indian
Ocean commerce. Many races and ideas were introduced into the peninsula from
Africa, South
and
Southeast Asia, as well as the
Malay archipelago. Today, the traces of these early interactions with the
oceanic world of the Indian Ocean survive in the small minorities of races,
peoples, languages and religions, such as the presence of Africans and Shihus.
After centuries-long domination by the
Ottoman and
British Empires, Qatar became an independent
state on
September
3, 1971
(but national celebration day is December 18).
Although the
peninsular land mass that makes up Qatar has sustained humans for thousands
of years, for the bulk of its history the
arid
climate
fostered only short-term settlements by
nomadic tribes.
The British initially sought out Qatar and the Persian Gulf as an
intermediary vantage point en route to their
colonial
interests in India,
although the discovery of
oil and
other
hydrocarbons
Al Khalifa clan reigned over the Northern Qatari peninsula from the nearby
island of Bahrainn
to the west.
Although Qatar had the legal status of a
dependency, resentment festered against the Bahraini Al Khalifas along the
eastern seaboard of the Qatari peninsula. In 1867, the Al Khalifas launched a
successful effort to squash the Qatari rebels, sending a massive naval force to
Al Wakrah.
However, the Bahraini aggression was in violation on the 1820 Anglo-Bahraini
Treaty. The diplomatic response of the British to this violation set into motion
the political forces that would eventuate in the founding of the state of Qatar.
In addition to censuring Bahrain for its breach of agreement, the British
Protectorate (per Colonel
Lewis
Pelly) asked to
negotiate
with a representative from Qatar. The request carried with it a tacit
recognition of Qatar’s status as distinct from Bahrain. The Qataris chose as
their negotiator the respected
entrepreneur and long-time resident of
Doha, Muhammed bin
Thani. His clan, the
Al Thanis, had taken relatively little part in Persian Gulf politics, but
the diplomatic foray ensured their participation in the movement towards
independence and their hegemony as the future ruling family, a
dynasty that
continues to this day. The results of the negotiations left Qatar with a
new-found sense of political selfhood, although it did not gain official
standing as a British
protectorate until 1916.
Diwan Al-Emiri
The reach of the
British Empire diminished after the
Second World War, especially following
Indian independence in 1947. Pressure for a British withdrawal from the Arab
emirates in the Persian Gulf increased during the 1950s, and the British
welcomed Kuwait's
declaration of independence in 1961. When Britain officially announced in 1968
that it would disengage politically (though not economically) from the Persian
Gulf in three years' time, Qatar joined Bahrain and seven other
Trucial States in a
federation.
Regional disputes, however, quickly compelled Qatar to resign and declare
independence from the coalition that would evolve into the seven-emirate
United Arab Emirates. On September 3, 1971, Qatar became an independent
sovereign state.
In 1991, Qatar played a significant role in the
Persian Gulf War, particularly during the
Battle of Khafji in which Qatari tanks rolled through the streets of the
town providing fire support for
Saudi Arabian National Guardd units which were fighting against units of the
Iraqi Army. Qatar also allowed
Coalition
troops from Canada to use the country as an airbase to launch aircraft on
CAP
duty.
Since 1995[update],
Emir
Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani has ruled Qatar, seizing control of the country
from his father
Khalifa bin Hamad Al Thani while the latter vacationed in
Switzerland. Under Emir Hamad, Qatar has experienced a notable amount of
sociopolitical
liberalization, including the endorsement of
women's suffrage or right to vote, drafting a new constitution, and the
launch of
Al Jazeera, a leading English and Arabic
news source which operates a
website and
satellite television news channel.
The
International Monetary Fund states that Qatar has the highest GDP per capita
in the world, followed by Luxembourg. The
World Factbook ranks Qatar at second, following Luxembourg.
Qatar served as the headquarters and one of the main launching sites of the
US invasion of Iraq[8]
in 2003.
In March 2005, a
suicide-bombing killed a British teacher at the Doha Players Theatre,
shocking for a country that had not previously experienced acts of
terrorism.
The bombing was carried out by Omar Ahmed Abdullah Ali, an
Egyptian residing
in Qatar, who had suspected ties to
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.[9][10]
Qatar has an emirate government type..[5]
Based on Islamic and civil law codes; discretionary system of law controlled by
the Amir, although civil codes are being implemented; Islamic law dominates
family and personal matters; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction.[5]
Economy
Qatar has experienced rapid economic growth over the last several years on
the back of high oil prices, and in 2008 posted its eighth consecutive budget
surplus. Economic policy is focused on developing Qatar's nonassociated natural
gas reserves and increasing private and foreign investment in non-energy
sectors, but oil and gas still account for more than 50% of GDP, roughly 85% of
export earnings, and 70% of government revenues. Oil and gas have made Qatar the
second highest per-capita income country – following Liechtenstein – and one of
the world's fastest growing. Proved oil reserves of 15 billion barrels should
enable continued output at current levels for 37 years. Qatar's proved reserves
of natural gas are nearly 26 trillion cubic meters, about 14% of the world total
and third largest in the world. The drop in oil prices in late 2008 and the
global financial crisis will reduce Qatar's budget surplus and may slow the pace
of investment and development projects in 2009.[5]
Before the discovery of oil, the economy of the Qatari region focused on
fishing and
pearl
hunting. After the introduction of the
Japanese
cultured pearl onto the world market in the 1920s and 1930s, Qatar's
pearling industry faltered. However, the discovery of
oil, beginning in the
1940s, completely transformed the state's economy. Now the country has a high
standard of living, with many social services offered to its citizens and
all the amenities of any modern state.
Qatar’s national income primarily derives from oil and
natural
gas exports.
The country has oil reserves of 15 billion barrels (2.4 km³),
while gas reserves in the giant North Field (South
Pars for Iran) which straddles the border with Iran and are almost as large
as the peninsula itself are estimated to be between 800 trillion cubic feet
(23,000 km3) to 80 trillion cubic feet (2,300 km3) (1
trillion cubic feet is equivalent to about 80 million barrels (13,000,000 m3)
of oil). Qatar is sometimes referred to as the Saudi Arabia of natural gas.
Qataris’ wealth
and
standard of living compare well with those of
Western European states; Qatar has the highest
GDP per capita in the Arab World according to the
International Monetary Fund (2006)[11]
and the second highest GDP per capita in the world according to the CIA World
Factbook.[5]
With no
income tax, Qatar, along with
Bahrain, is
one of the countries with the lowest tax rates in the world.
While oil and gas will probably remain the backbone of Qatar’s economy for
some time to come, the country seeks to stimulate the private sector and develop
a “knowledge
economy”. In 2004, it established the
Qatar Science & Technology Park to attract and serve
technology-based
companies and entrepreneurs, from overseas and within Qatar. Qatar also
established
Education City, which consists of international colleges. For the 15th
Asian Games in Doha, it established
Doha Sports City, consisting of Khalifa stadium, the
Aspire Sports Academy, aquatic centres, exhibition centres and many other
sports related buildings and centres. Following the success of the Asian Games,
Doha kicked off an official bid to host the
2016 Summer Olympics in October 2007.[12]
Qatar also plans to build an "entertainment city" in the future.
Qatar aims to become a
role model
for economic and social transformation in the region. Large scale
investment
in all social and economic sectors will also lead to the development of a strong
financial market.
The
Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) provides financial institutions with world
class services in investment, margin and no-interest loans, and capital support.
These platforms are situated in an economy founded on the development of its
hydrocarbons resources, specifically its exportation of petroleum. It has been
created with a long term perspective to support the development of Qatar and the
wider region, develop local and regional markets, and strengthen the links
between the energy based economies and global financial markets.
Apart from Qatar itself, which needs to raise capital to finance projects of
more than US$130 billion, the QFC also provides a conduit for financial
institutions to access nearly US$1 trillion of investments which stretch across
the GCC as a whole over the next decade.
The new town of
Lusail, the largest project ever in Qatar, is under construction.
Geography
Desert landscape in Qatar
The Qatari
peninsula just 100 miles (161 km) north into the Persian Gulf from Saudi
Arabia and is slightly smaller than the state of
Massachusetts,
USA.
Much of the country consists of a low, barren
plain, covered
with sand. To the
southeast lies the spectacular
Khor al Adaid (“Inland
Sea”), an area of rolling sand dunes surrounding an
inlet of the
Persian Gulf. There are mild winters and very hot, humid summers.
The highest point in Qatar is Qurayn Abu al Bawl at 103 metres (340 ft)[5]
in the Jebel Dukhan to the west, a range of low
limestone
outcrops
running north-south from Zikrit through
Umm Bab to
the southern border. The Jebel Dukhan area also contains Qatar’s main onshore
oil deposits,
while the
natural gas fields lie offshore, to the northwest of the peninsula.
Religion
Islam is the
predominant Religion and makes up 77.5% of the population of Qatar and all
others make up the remaining 22.5%.[5]
Sunni Muslims constitute 98% percent of Muslim population. The majority of
noncitizens are from South and Southeast Asian and Arab countries working on
temporary employment contracts, accompanied by family members in some cases.
Most noncitizens are Sunni or Shi'a Muslims,
Christians,
Hindus,
Buddhists, or Bahá'ís. Most foreign workers and their families live near the
major employment centers of Doha, Al Khor, Mesaieed, and Dukhan.
The Hindu
community is almost exclusively
Indian, while
Buddhists include South, Southeast, and East Asians. Most Bahá'ís come from
Iran. Religion is not a criterion for citizenship, according to the Nationality
Law. However, nearly all Qatari citizens are either Sunni or Shi'a Muslims,
except for at least one Christian, a few Bahá'ís, and their respective families
who were granted citizenship.
No foreign missionary groups operate openly in the country[13],
but in 2008 the government allowed some churches to conduct mass. In March 2008
the
Roman Catholic
Church “Our Lady of the Rosary” was consecrated in Doha.
Population
Almost all Qataris profess
Islam. Besides
ethnic
Arabs, much of the population migrated from various nations to work in the
country’s
oil industry.
Arabic serves as the official language. However, English as well as many
other languages like
Hindi,
Pashto,
Malayalam,
Punjabi,
Urdu,
Sindhi,
Balochi,
Tamil,
Telugu,
Bengali,
Tagalog, and
Persian are widely spoken in Qatar.
Expatriates form the majority of Qatar’s residents. The petrochemical
industry has attracted people from all around the world. Most of the expatriates
come from
South Asia and from non-oil-rich Arab states. Because a large percentage of
the expatriates are male, Qatar has a heavily skewed sex ratio, with 3.46 males
per female.[14]
In July 2007, the country had a growing population of approximately 907,229
people,[5]
of whom approximately 350,000 were believed to be citizens.[15]
Qatari citizens follow the dominant Hanbali branch of Islam practiced in
neighboring Saudi Arabia, therefore it is considered the culturally closest
Persian Gulf state to Saudi Arabia.
The majority of the estimated 800,000 non-citizens are individuals from South
and South East Asian and Arab countries working on temporary employment
contracts in most cases without their accompanying family members. Most foreign
workers and their families live near the major employment centers of
Doha,
Al Khor,
Messaeed, and
Dukhan.
Culture
Qatari culture (music, art, dress, and cuisine) is extremely similar to
that of other
Arab countries of the Persian Gulf. Arab tribes from Saudi Arabia migrated
to Qatar and other places in the gulf; therefore, the culture in the Persian
Gulf region varies little from country to country.
Qatar explicitly uses Sharia law as the basis of its government, and the vast
majority of its citizens follow
Hanbali
Madhhab. Hanbali (Arabic: حنبلى ) is one of the four schools (Madhhabs) of
Fiqh or religious law within Sunni Islam (The other three are Hanafi, Maliki and
Shafii). Sunni Muslims believe that all four schools have "correct guidance",
and the differences between them lie not in the fundamentals of faith, but in
finer judgments and jurisprudence, which are a result of the independent
reasoning of the imams and the scholars who followed them. Because their
individual methodologies of interpretation and extraction from the primary
sources (rusul) were different, they came to different judgments on particular
matters.
Shi'as comprise around 2% of the Muslim population in Qatar.
Qatari
law
When contrasted with other Arab states such as
Saudi
Arabia, for instance, Qatar has comparatively liberal laws, but is still not
as liberal as some other
Arab states of the Persian Gulf like
UAE
or Bahrain.
Qatar is a
civil law jurisdiction. However,
Shari'a or Islamic law is applied to aspects of
family law,
inheritance and certain
criminal acts. Women can legally drive in Qatar and there is a strong
emphasis in equality and human rights brought by Qatar's
National Human Rights Committee.
The country has undergone a period of liberalization and modernisation during
the reign of the current Emir,
Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, who came to power in 1995. The laws of Qatar
tolerate
alcohol to a certain extent. However, public bars and nightclubs in Qatar
operate only in expensive hotels and clubs, much like in the UAE, though the
number of establishments has yet to equal that of
UAE.
Expatriate residents in Qatar are eligible to receive liquor permits permitting
them to purchase alcohol for personal use through Qatar Distribution Company,
the exclusive importer and retailer for alcohol in Qatar. Qatar has further been
liberalised due to the 15th Asian Games, but is cautious of becoming too liberal
in their law. Overall Qatar has yet to reach the more western laws of UAE or
Bahrain, and though plans are being made for more development, the government is
cautious.
In common with other Persian Gulf Arab countries, sponsorship laws exist in
Qatar. These laws have been widely described as akin to modern-day slavery.[21]
The Sponsorship system (Kafeel or Kafala) exists throughout the GCC and means
that a worker (not a tourist) may not enter the country without having a kafeel,
cannot leave without the kafeel's permission (an Exit Permit must first be
awarded by the sponsor, or kafeel), and the sponsor has the right to ban the
employee from entering Qatar within 2–5 years of his first departure. Many
sponsors do not allow the transfer of one employee to another sponsor.
Education
In recent years Qatar has placed great emphasis on
education.
Citizens are required to attend government provided education from
kindergarten through to
high
school.[22]
Qatar University was founded in 1973. More recently, with the support of the
Qatar Foundation, some major
American universities have opened branch
campuses in
Education City, Qatar. These include
Carnegie Mellon University,
Georgetown University School of Foreign Service,
Texas A&M University,
Virginia Commonwealth University,
Cornell University’s
Weill Cornell Medical College and
Northwestern University. In 2004, Qatar established the
Qatar Science & Technology Park at Education City to link those universities
with industry. Education City is also home to a fully
accredited
International Baccalaureate school,
Qatar
Academy. Two Canadian institutions, the
College of the North Atlantic and the
University of Calgary, also operate campuses in Doha. Other
for-profit universities have also established campuses in the city
[23].
In 2009, the
Qatar Foundation launches the
World Innovation Summit for Education – WISE – a global forum that brings
together
education stakeholders, opinion leaders and decision makers from all over
the world to discuss educational issues. The first edition will be held in
Doha, Qatar from
November 16 to 18 2009.
Moreover, in 2007 the American
Brookings Institution announced that it was opening the Brookings Doha
Center to undertake research and programming on the socio-economic and
geo-political issues facing the region.
[24]
The Council directs and controls education for all ages from the
pre-school level through the university level, including the “Education for
a New Era”[25]
reform initiative.
The Emir’s second wife, Her Highness
Sheikha Mozah Bint Nasser Al-Missned, has been instrumental in new education
initiatives in Qatar. She chairs the Qatar Foundation, sits on the board of
Qatar’s Supreme Education Council, and is a major driving force behind the
importation of Western expertise into the education system, particularly at the
college level.
Health
care
Hamad
Medical Corporation (HMC) is the premier non-profit health care provider in
Doha, Qatar. Established by the Emiri decree in 1979, HMC manages four highly
specialized hospitals:
Hamad General Hospital,
Rumailah Hospital,
Women’s Hospital,
Al-Amal
Hospital, Psychiatric Hospital and the
Primary Health Care Centers.
Through the years, HMC has fulfilled its mandate of providing the best care
for all patients irrespective of nationality, and provided “health for all” as
pledged by the state of Qatar.
Since its establishment in October 1979, HMC has rapidly developed highly
specialized medical facilities capable of providing state of the art diagnosis
and treatment of diseases that previously could only be managed in overseas
medical centers.
HMC implements a policy of continuous improvement of all management systems
and patient care protocols. All equipments and facilities are upgraded to
provide high quality care.
Continued expansion of facilities for diagnosis and therapy is the focus of
efforts in short term. Coupled with the new facility construction program is a
sustained effort to attract and retain the best human resources to provide the
diagnostic and therapeutic skills needed.
HMC, throughout the 23-year existence of Hamad General Hospital, has
accumulated a wealth of vital information essential to improve quality of care
and public education. The profile of patients has shifted, and new trends, which
HMC has to address, have emerged. A research center has been established.
In 2004 it was announced that a high tech medical and research centre was to
be built in Doha on the Qatar Foundation’s 2,500 acre campus. The e SIDRA Medical
and Research Center will offer speciality care to women and children and also
provide select care for all adults. It is expected to open in 2012.[26]
Communications
Qatar has a modern telecommunication system centered in Doha.
Tropospheric scatter to Bahrain; microwave radio relay to Saudi Arabia and
UAE; submarine cable to Bahrain and UAE; satellite earth stations – two Intelsat
(one Atlantic Ocean and one Indian Ocean) and one Arabsat. Callers can call
Qatar using submarine cable, satellite or VoIP. However,
Qtel has interfered
with VoIP systems in the past, and Skype's website has been blocked before.
Following complaints from individuals, the website has been unblocked, and
Paltalk has been permanently blocked.
Qtel’s ISP branch, Internet Qatar, uses SmartFilter to block websites they
deem inappropriate to Qatari interests and morality.
In Qatar,
ictQATAR (Supreme Council of Information and Communication Technology) is
the government agency regulating telecommunication. Under the Chairmanship of
His Highness the Heir Apparent Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani,
ictQATAR has two authorities:
ictQATAR is the country's independent and fair telecommunications regulator
and consumer advocate. As a regulator, ictQATAR is mandated to protect consumers
and business from unfair practices as the country transitions to a competitive
telecoms market. ictQATAR is the government body that supports innovative
technologies to ensure that people of all ages and income levels are comfortable
with technology. Through technology, ictQATAR aims to foster citizen's
involvement with the government. Working with industry and other government
agencies, ictQATAR is guiding initiatives in a range of sectors including
e-education, e-business, e-health, e-government, infrastructure and information
security.
Vodafone Qatar, in partnership with the Qatar Foundation, received the
second public mobile networks and services license in Qatar on 28 June 2008 and
switched on their mobile network on 1 March 2009. They launched 07/07/09,
opening their
online
store first followed by retail and third party distribution locations
throughout Doha.
Al
Jazeera (Arabic: الجزيرة, al-ğazīrä, [al.dʒaˈziː.ra], meaning “The
Peninsula”) is a television network headquartered in
Doha, Qatar. Al
Jazeera initially launched as an
Arabic news and current affairs
satellite
TV channel of the same name, but has since expanded into a network of several
specialty TV channels. Print media is going through expansion, with over three
English dailies and Arabic titles. Qatar Today is the only monthly business
magazine in the country. It is published by Oryx Advertising, which is the
largest magazine publisher in Qatar. The group also publishes several titles
like Qatar Al Youm, the only monthly business magazine in Qatar in Arabic
language, Woman Today, the only magazine for working women, and GLAM, the only
fashion magazine.
Human
rights
Qatar is a destination country for men and women from South and Southeast
Asia who migrate willingly, but are subsequently trafficked into involuntary
servitude as domestic workers and laborers, and, to a lesser extent, commercial
sexual exploitation; the most common offense was forcing workers to accept worse
contract terms than those under which they were recruited; other conditions
include bonded labor, withholding of pay, restrictions on movement, arbitrary
detention, and physical, mental, and sexual abuse..[5]
According to the Trafficking in Persons Report by the
US State Department, men and women who are lured into Qatar by promises of
high wages are often forced into underpaid labor. The report states that Qatari
laws against forced labor are rarely enforced and that labor laws often result
in the detention of victims in deportation centers, pending the completion of
legal proceedings. The report places Qatar at tier 3, as one of the countries
that neither satisfies the minimum standards or demonstrates significant efforts
to come into compliance.[27][28]
The government maintains that it is setting the benchmark when it comes to
human
rights[29]
and treatment of laborers.
Qatari contracting agency Barwa is constructing a residential area for
laborers known as Barwa Al Baraha, also called Workers City. The project was
launched after a recent scandal in
Dubai's Labor
'Slave' camps. The project aims to provide a reasonable standard of living as
defined by the new Human Rights Legislation.[30]
The Barwa Al Baraha will cost around US$1.1 billion and will be a completely
integrated city in the industrial area in Doha. Along with 4.25 square meters of
living space per person, the residential project will provide parks,
recreational areas, malls, and shops for laborers. Phase one of the project was
set to be completed at the end of 2008, and the project itself will be completed
by the middle of 2010.[31]