US to deploy officials in Qatar in counter-terrorism accord

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US to deploy officials in Qatar in counter-terrorism accord

The agreement has not been approved by the four US-allied Arab states which accuse Doha of aiding terrorists.

By Reuters

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Published: Fri 21 Jul 2017, 5:11 PM

Last updated: Sat 22 Jul 2017, 9:03 AM

The United States will post officials at the Qatari state prosecutor's office as part of a Qatari-U.S. agreement signed this month to fight the financing of terrorism, people familiar with the matter said.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson reached the deal with Qatar during a round of shuttle diplomacy aimed at ending a diplomatic crisis in the Gulf. The agreement has not been approved by the four US-allied Arab states which accuse Doha of aiding terrorists.
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE and Egypt imposed sanctions on Qatar last month, saying the gas-rich Gulf state finances militants throughout the region.
No details about the contents of the agreement signed by Tillerson and his Qatari counterpart, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, have been publicly released.
But a Western official in the Gulf who has seen the document said it specifies actions Qatar will take by the end of the year, including placing two US Department of Justice officials in Qatar's general prosecution.
"They will work hand in hand with Qatar to charge individuals accused of financing terrorists," said the official, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.
Other actions in the agreement include imposing travel bans, enforcing surveillance and freezing the assets of individuals with suspected links to terrorism. The accord points to internationally agreed definitions of terrorism without specifying particular groups.
A US Department of Justice spokesman declined to comment.
A Qatari official said that the country's general prosecutor would be working with U.S. officials but that the terms of the cooperation had not been finalized.
The deal suggests White House officials hope to use the Gulf crisis over Qatar as a way to stem alleged financing flows from the wealthy region to terrorist groups.
"It's a very strong agreement. If followed, this should achieve exactly what Trump requested in the Riyadh summit," said the Western official.
Qatar Taking Action
The Saudi-led alliance cut diplomatic ties and severed all transport links with Qatar soon after a visit to Riyadh in May by President Donald Trump, who days later said Qatar was a "funder of terrorism at a very high level."
Qatar appears to be taking steps to ease the pressure.
Changes to Qatar anti-terror law 'positive': UAE


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