Tag Archives: Qatar

Qatar ‘appalled’ at alleged Netanyahu criticism of mediation in Gaza war – Al Jazeera English

  1. Qatar ‘appalled’ at alleged Netanyahu criticism of mediation in Gaza war Al Jazeera English
  2. Qatar ‘appalled’ by Netanyahu’s criticism, calls it ‘destructive’ to hostage deal efforts The Times of Israel
  3. Qatar Warns Netanyahu After Israel PM Accuses It Of Funding Hamas In Gaza; ‘Focus On Hostages…’ Hindustan Times
  4. Middle East crisis live: Qatar accuses Netanyahu of obstructing mediation; death toll in attack on UNRWA shelter rises to 12 The Guardian
  5. Smotrich fires back at Qatar: ‘Terror-backing state’ that won’t be involved in Gaza post-war The Times of Israel

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Qatar says talks for fresh Gaza pause ongoing, chides Israel for rejecting ceasefire – The Times of Israel

  1. Qatar says talks for fresh Gaza pause ongoing, chides Israel for rejecting ceasefire The Times of Israel
  2. Israel-Gaza war live: Israel’s bombardment of Gaza ‘narrowing the window’ for renewed hostage deal, says Qatar PM The Guardian
  3. Out of the coup: how a palace putsch helped make Qatar a global peace broker South China Morning Post
  4. Qatar: Efforts continuing to renew Israel-Hamas truce, release more hostages The Times of Israel
  5. Qatar PM warns: Gaza war putting entire generation at risk of ‘radicalisation’ Hindustan Times

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‘We should not accept Qatar as a mediator,’ says Israeli minister – The Jerusalem Post

  1. ‘We should not accept Qatar as a mediator,’ says Israeli minister The Jerusalem Post
  2. In call with Blinken, Qatari PM says Doha committed to truce efforts in Israel-Hamas war The Times of Israel
  3. Secretary Blinken’s Call with Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Al Thani – United States Department of State Department of State
  4. Israel recalls negotiation team from Qatar, questions over hostages remaining in Gaza WHAS11
  5. ‘Committed to Truce Efforts’: Qatar PM al-Thani Tells Blinken as Both Discuss Hostage Release, Deescalation News18

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Israel recalls negotiation team from Qatar, questions over hostages remaining in Gaza – WHAS11

  1. Israel recalls negotiation team from Qatar, questions over hostages remaining in Gaza WHAS11
  2. In call with Blinken, Qatari PM says Doha committed to truce efforts in Israel-Hamas war The Times of Israel
  3. Secretary Blinken’s Call with Qatari Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Al Thani – United States Department of State Department of State
  4. ‘Committed to Truce Efforts’: Qatar PM al-Thani Tells Blinken as Both Discuss Hostage Release, Deescalation News18
  5. Live updates: Israel-Hamas war, Gaza airstrikes, IDF offensive CNN International
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Qatar death penalty: ‘It’s not entirely a hopeless situation,’ explains India’s former Ambassador KP Fabian – Times of India

  1. Qatar death penalty: ‘It’s not entirely a hopeless situation,’ explains India’s former Ambassador KP Fabian Times of India
  2. ‘Bring Them Back…’: Jaishankar’s Speech On Navy Veterans On Death Row In Qatar Is Viral Hindustan Times
  3. Qatar Indian Navy Officers News | Qatar Hands Death Penalty To 8 Former Indian Navy Men | News18 CNN-News18
  4. With life of eight Indians in Qatar at stake, India needs deft diplomacy The Indian Express
  5. Mystery trial: The Hindu Editorial on the case of the former Indian Navy personnel in Qatar The Hindu
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Israel slated to shut ‘pro-Hamas’ network Al-Jazeera run by Qatar – The Jerusalem Post

  1. Israel slated to shut ‘pro-Hamas’ network Al-Jazeera run by Qatar The Jerusalem Post
  2. Israel approves emergency regulations that could pave way to closing Al Jazeera offices The Times of Israel
  3. Israel-Palestine war: Authorities finalising closure of Al Jazeera, Israeli media reports Middle East Eye
  4. Israel moves to shut down Al Jazeera’s local office and confiscate equipment, in effort to suppress pro-Palestinian coverage Meduza
  5. Gov’t approves emergency regulations that could pave way to closing Al Jazeera offices The Times of Israel
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Qatar Says Will Honor Deal Over Iran’s Funds – ایران اینترنشنال

  1. Qatar Says Will Honor Deal Over Iran’s Funds ایران اینترنشنال
  2. Iran: US ‘can NOT renege’ on deal to transfer $6 billion through Qatar for hostages The Times of Israel
  3. Iran doubles down on backing Hamas, says US unable to block $6 billion fund Al-Monitor
  4. US denies Iran access to $6 billion fund from prisoner swap deal – Business Daily FRANCE 24 English
  5. US Appears to Consider Blocking Iran’s Access to $6 Billion Voice of America – VOA News
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2023 Concacaf Gold Cup draw results: The United States face Jamaica in Group A; Mexico get Honduras and Qatar – CBS Sports

  1. 2023 Concacaf Gold Cup draw results: The United States face Jamaica in Group A; Mexico get Honduras and Qatar CBS Sports
  2. Draw Delivers Prelims matchups and groups for 2023 Concacaf Gold Cup Concacaf
  3. USMNT Concacaf Gold Cup draw: U.S. in group with Jamaica, Nicaragua and qualifier The Washington Post
  4. USMNT Will Be Joined By Jamaica, Nicaragua And One Remaining Qualifier As Concacaf Gold Cup Title Defense Begins | U.S. Soccer Official Website U.S. Soccer
  5. Gold Cup 2023 draw results: USMNT to face Jamaica, Nicaragua and Team TBD | MLSSoccer.com MLSsoccer.com
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Airbus and Qatar Airways settle bitter A350 jet row

PARIS, Feb 1 (Reuters) – Airbus (AIR.PA) and Qatar Airways have settled a dispute over grounded A350 jets, the companies said on Wednesday, averting a potentially damaging UK court trial after a blistering 18-month feud that tore the lid off the global jet market.

The “amicable and mutually agreeable settlement” ends a $2 billion row over surface damage on the long-haul jets. The spat led to the withdrawal of billions of dollars’ worth of jet deals by Airbus and prompted Qatar to increase purchases from Boeing.

The cancelled orders for 23 undelivered A350s and 50 smaller A321neos have been restored under the new deal, which is also expected to see Airbus pay several hundred million dollars to the Gulf carrier, while winning a reprieve from other claims.

Financial details were not publicly disclosed.

The companies said neither admitted liability. Both pledged to drop claims and “move forward and work together as partners”.

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The deal heads off what amounted to an unprecedented public divorce trial between heavyweights in the normally tight-knit and secretive $150 billion jet industry.

The two sides had piled up combined claims and counter-claims worth about $2 billion ahead of the June trial.

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire welcomed the deal, which came in the wake of increasing political involvement amid close ties between France, where Airbus is based, and Qatar.

“It is the culmination of significant joint efforts. It is excellent news for the French aerospace industry,” he said.

Airbus shares closed up 1% before the announcement.

Qatar Airways had taken the unusual step of publicly challenging the world’s largest planemaker over safety after paint cracks exposed gaps in a sub-layer of lightning protection on its new-generation A350 carbon-composite jets.

Airbus had acknowledged quality flaws but, backed by European regulators, had insisted that the jets were safe and accused the airline of exaggerating flaws to win compensation.

DAMAGES

Supported by a growing army of lawyers, both sides repeatedly bickered in preliminary hearings over access to documents, to the growing frustration of a judge forced to order co-operation.

Analysts said the deal would allow both sides to feel vindicated, with Qatar Airways winning damages and recognition that the problem lay outside the manual and therefore required a new repair, and Airbus standing its ground on safety and spared the difficult task of finding a home for cancelled A350s.

Qatar will get the in-demand A321neos needed to plan its growth, albeit three years later than expected, in 2026. Airbus’ decision to revoke that order, separate from the disputed A350 contract, had been criticised by global airlines group IATA.

Airbus said it had done its best to avoid pushing Qatar too far back in the queue, though some experts question whether it could have met the earlier schedule because of supply problems.

The settlement is also expected to stop the clock ticking on a claim for grounding compensation that had been growing by $6 million a day, triggered by a clause agreed upon after the repainting of a jet for the World Cup revealed significant surface damage.

Originally valued at $200,000 per day per plane, Airbus’ theoretical liability was ratcheting upwards by a total of $250,000 an hour for 30 jets – or $2 billion a year – by the time the deal was struck, based on court filings. Neither side commented on settlement details.

Airbus said it would now work with the airline and regulators to provide the necessary “repair solution” and return Qatar’s 30 grounded planes to the air.

Confirmation of a settlement came after Reuters reported a deal could arrive as early as Wednesday. In 2021, a Reuters investigation revealed other airlines had been affected by A350 skin degradation, all of whom said it was “cosmetic”.

The dispute has focused attention on the design of modern carbon-fibre jets, which do not interact as smoothly with paint as traditional metal ones, and shed light on industrial methods.

Additional reporting by Leigh Thomas, Michel Rose
Editing by David Goodman, Diane Craft and Gerry Doyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Airbus Revives Order From Qatar Airways Following Paint-Dispute Settlement

LONDON—

Airbus

EADSY 2.36%

SE agreed to revive orders for close to 75 aircraft from Qatar Airways after reaching a settlement with the Middle East airline over a long-running dispute about chipping paint on its A350 wide-body models.

A spokesman for Airbus said it would now go ahead with delivering 50 A321 narrow-bodies and 23 remaining A350 twin-aisles previously ordered by Qatar.

The orders had been scrapped as part of an escalating, multibillion-dollar legal battle over the paint issue, which the airline had claimed could pose a safety concern. Airbus repeatedly denied the claims.

Airbus and Qatar Airways earlier Wednesday said in a joint statement that they had reached an “amicable and mutually agreeable settlement” in relation to the legal dispute. The companies didn’t disclose the details of the settlement other than to say the agreement didn’t amount to an admission of liability from either party. A program to repair the degradation on Qatar’s current fleet is under way, the companies added.

Qatar Airways had previously grounded 29 of its A350 jets and refused new deliveries over the issue, reducing its capacity amid a surge in travel to Doha for the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The airline has said the peeling paint was exposing the meshed copper foil that is designed to protect the aircraft from lightning strikes.

That led Qatar Airways to initiate legal proceedings against Airbus in London, in which the carrier had sought damages partly based on the impact on its operations from not being able to use the aircraft. A possible trial had been scheduled for later this year.

While the paint issue has also affected other A350s in service at other Airbus customers, only Qatar Airways had taken the step to unilaterally ground the aircraft. Airbus and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency, which oversees the Toulouse, France-based plane maker, have insisted that the issue is only cosmetic.

The situation had led to a broad fallout between Airbus and one of its biggest customers. In August, Airbus ended all new business with Qatar Airways, canceling contracts valued at more than $13 billion according to the latest available list prices and before the hefty discounts plane makers typically give to customers.

After Airbus canceled a deal to sell Qatar Airways 50 of its A321 jets, the Gulf carrier ordered up to 50 of rival

Boeing Co.

’s 737 MAX 10 single-aisle jets within two weeks. Qatar Airways had previously canceled most of an existing MAX order in 2020 after receiving five of the planes.

Airbus lawyers alleged that Qatar Airways had exaggerated concerns about the issue in an attempt to claim compensation and refuse delivery of aircraft that it didn’t need as the pandemic hit demand for air travel. The plane maker complained in court that the airline and its regulator, the Qatar Civil Aviation Authority, had failed to provide documentation that showed the technical justifications behind grounding the aircraft.

Qatar Airways has said it provided images of the damage, which it purported showed the scale of the issue and the potential safety risk.

Qatar Airways Chief Executive

Akbar Al Baker

has long had a reputation as a tough customer, publicly lashing out at both Airbus and Boeing when he perceives delivery or quality issues.

Write to Benjamin Katz at ben.katz@wsj.com

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