Peter Tatchell: Protest Against Emir of Qatar’s State Visit

Keir Starmer & King Charles are wrong to host a homophobic, sexist dictatorship

London, UK – 28 November 2024

 

The Peter Tatchell Foundation will stage a peaceful protest against the State Visit to Britain on 3 December by the Emir of Qatar, citing the Gulf nation’s appalling abuse of the human rights of women, LGBTs and migrant workers.

The protest will take place at Canada Gate, at the righthand side of Buckingham Palace, at 11am on Tuesday 3 December, as the Emir arrives in the State Coach. 

“Keir Starmer and King Charles should not reward the Emir with the honour of a State Visit while his regime continues to victimise women, LGBTs and migrant workers. Feting the Emir is collusion with tyranny,” said Peter Tatchell, Director of the Peter Tatchell Foundation.

“The Qatar government is a police state dictatorship. It’s guilty of systemic homophobia, sexism and the suppression of workers’ rights and basic freedoms like free speech and the right to protest.”

“This State Visit sends the wrong message—that the UK prioritises trade and investment over human rights,” added Mr Tatchell. “The UK should be challenging Qatar’s human rights record and seeking the release of political prisoners, not rewarding its ruler with royal pageantry and red carpets.”

Mr Tatchell added:

“LGBT+ Qataris face harassment on the street, online entrapment by the police, arrest, three years jail and potentially the death penalty. Qatar has secret gay conversion centres where LGBTs can be detained and subjected to abusive attempts to turn them straight.

“Women have to get the permission of a male guardian to marry, study, travel abroad, work in many government jobs and access reproductive health care.

“Over 6,500 migrant workers have died since Qatar was given the right to host the World Cup in 2010. Many families are still waiting for compensation. Migrant workers complain of unpaid wages, overcrowded slum hostels and being refused permission to change jobs. Those who protest against these abuses have been arrested and deported.

“These human rights abuses are incompatible with the values of equality and dignity that the UK claims to uphold,” he said.

Peter Tatchell has a long history of challenging Qatar’s human rights abuses. Two weeks before the 2022 FIFA World Cup, he became the first person to stage a LGBT+ rights protest in Qatar, holding a placard outside Doha’s National Museum that read: “Qatar arrests, jails & subjects LGBTs to ‘conversion’.” He was detained and interrogated by the authorities before being ordered to the airport to depart Qatar. “That protest was in solidarity with LGBT+ Qataris and all those who are persecuted by the regime,” Mr Tatchell said. “This London protest is about continuing to expose the brutal reality behind Qatar’s carefully crafted public image.”

“The Emir’s visit is an opportunity to shine a global spotlight on Qatar’s human rights abuses,” Mr Tatchell concluded. “We urge everyone who values equality and freedom to join our peaceful protest.”