Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Qatar

Country in West Asia


Country in West Asia

FieldValue
conventional_long_nameState of Qatar
common_nameQatar
native_namear
ar
image_flagFlag of Qatar.svg
flag_size135
image_coatEmblem of Qatar (2022–present).svg
symbol_typeEmblem
national_mottoالله، الوطن، الأمير
ar
"God, Nation, Emir"
national_anthemالسلام الأميري
ar
"Peace to the Emir" [[File:National anthem of Qatar.ogg]]
image_mapQAT orthographic.svg
map_width250px
map_captionLocation and extent of Qatar (dark green) on the Arabian Peninsula
capitalDoha
coordinates
largest_citycapital
ethnic_groups{{ubl
* 43% South Asian<ref nameqsa-Aug13
ethnic_groups_year2019
ethnic_groups_ref
official_languagesArabic
demonymQatari
government_typeUnitary semi-constitutional monarchy
leader_title1Emir
leader_name1Tamim bin Hamad
leader_title2Deputy Emir
leader_name2Abdullah bin Hamad
leader_title3Prime Minister
leader_name3Mohammed bin Abdulrahman
legislatureConsultative Assembly
sovereignty_typeEstablishment
established_event1Qatar National Day
established_date118 December 1878
established_event2Declared independence
established_date21 September 1971
established_event3Independence from the United Kingdom
established_date33 September 1971
area_km211,581
area_rank158th
area_sq_mi4,467.6
percent_waternegligible
population_estimate3,173,024
population_census2,846,118
population_estimate_year2024
population_estimate_rank134th
population_census_year2020
population_density_km2264
population_density_sq_miauto
population_density_rank52th
GDP_PPP$378.080 billion
GDP_PPP_year2025
GDP_PPP_rank60th
GDP_PPP_per_capita$121,610
GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank4th
GDP_nominal$222.780 billion
GDP_nominal_year2025
GDP_nominal_rank54th
GDP_nominal_per_capita$71,650
GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank9th
Gini35.1
Gini_year2017
Gini_change
Gini_ref
HDI0.886
HDI_year2023
HDI_changeincrease
HDI_ref
HDI_rank43rd
currencyQatari riyal
currency_codeQAR
time_zoneAST
utc_offset+3:00
drives_onright
calling_code[+974](974)
cctld{{ubl
religion{{ubl
religion_year2020
religion_ref
Note

the country

ar ar "God, Nation, Emir" ar "Peace to the Emir" [[File:National anthem of Qatar.ogg]] | 49% Arab |

  • 43% South Asian
    • 21.8% Indian
    • 12.5% Bangladeshi
    • 4.7% Pakistani
    • 4.35% Sri Lankan |7% other | .qa | قطر. |65.5% Islam (official) |15.1% Hinduism |14.2% Christianity |3.3% Buddhism |1.9% other

Qatar, officially the State of Qatar, is a country in West Asia. It occupies the Qatar Peninsula on the northeastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula in the Middle East; it shares its sole land border with Saudi Arabia to the south, with the rest of its territory surrounded by the Persian Gulf. The Gulf of Bahrain, an inlet of the Persian Gulf, separates Qatar from nearby Bahrain. The capital is Doha, home to over 80% of the country's inhabitants. Most of the land area is made up of flat, low-lying desert.

Qatar has been ruled as a hereditary monarchy by the House of Thani since Mohammed bin Thani signed an agreement with Britain in 1868 that recognised its separate status. Following Ottoman rule, Qatar became a British protectorate in 1916 and gained independence in 1971. The current emir is Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, who, like previous emirs, holds nearly all executive, legislative, and judicial authority in an autocratic manner under the Constitution of Qatar. He appoints the prime minister and cabinet. The Consultative Assembly (also known as the "Shura Council") can block legislation and has a limited ability to dismiss ministers, but is fully appointed by the emir. While Qatar held a partial Shura Council election in 2021, with two thirds of seats elected, in 2024 it moved to abolish those elections altogether, and reverted to a fully appointed Assembly.

In early 2017, the population of Qatar was 2.6 million, although only 313,000 of them were Qatari citizens and 2.3 million were expatriates and migrant workers. Its official religion is Islam. The country has the fourth-highest GDP (PPP) per capita in the world and the eleventh-highest GNI per capita (Atlas method). It ranks 42nd in the Human Development Index, the third-highest HDI in the Arab world. It is a high-income economy, backed by the world's third-largest natural gas reserves and oil reserves. Qatar is one of the world's largest exporters of liquefied natural gas and the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide per capita.

In the 21st century, Qatar emerged as both a major non-NATO ally of the United States and a middle power in the Arab world. Its economy has grown rapidly due to its resource-wealth, and its geopolitical power has risen through its media group, Al Jazeera Media Network, and reported financial support for rebel groups during the Arab Spring. Qatar also forms part of the Gulf Cooperation Council.

Name

Pliny the Elder, a Roman writer, documented the earliest account pertaining to the inhabitants of the peninsula around the mid-first century AD; he referred to them as the Catharrei, a designation that may have derived from the name of a prominent local settlement. A century later, Ptolemy produced the first known map to depict the peninsula, referring to it as Catara. The map also referenced a town named "Cadara" to the east of the peninsula. The term "Catara" (inhabitants, Cataraei) was exclusively used until the 18th century, after which "Katara" emerged as the most commonly recognised spelling. Eventually, after several variations—"Katr", "Kattar" and "Guttur"—the modern derivative Qatar was adopted as the country's name.

According to classical linguistic accounts, the term "Qatar" may derive from a type of informal transaction known as muqāṭarah, in which goods were purchased in sealed containers without measuring or weighing the contents, for a fixed price. This practice, also called jazāf, was reportedly widespread in Qatar's markets. Another explanation connects the name to the word qiṭār, meaning camel train, possibly alluding to Qatar's role in historical trade routes.

In Standard Arabic, the name is pronounced , while in the local dialect, Gulf Arabic, it is . English speakers use different approximate pronunciations as the Arabic pronunciations use sounds not present in English.

History

Main article: History of Qatar

Prehistory

Human habitation in Qatar dates back to 50,000 years ago. Settlements and tools dating back to the Stone Age have been unearthed in the peninsula. Mesopotamian artifacts originating from the Ubaid period (c. 6500–3800 BC) have been discovered in abandoned coastal settlements. Al Da'asa, a settlement located on the western coast of Qatar, is the most important Ubaid site in the country and is believed to have accommodated a small seasonal encampment. Some historians have theorised that the Sumerians may have originated from this region.

Antiquity

Kassite Babylonian material dating back to the second millennium BC found on the Al Khor Islands attests to trade relations between the inhabitants of Qatar and the Kassites in modern-day Bahrain. Among the findings were crushed snail shells and Kassite potsherds. It has been suggested that Qatar is the earliest known site of shellfish dye production, owing to a Kassite purple dye industry which existed on the coast.

In AD 224, the Sasanian Empire gained control over the territories surrounding the Persian Gulf. Qatar played a role in the commercial activity of the Sasanids, contributing at least two commodities: precious pearls and purple dye. Under the Sasanid reign, many of the inhabitants in eastern Arabia were introduced to Christianity following the eastward dispersal of the religion by Mesopotamian Christians (see also Christianity in pre-Islamic Arabia). Monasteries were constructed and further settlements were founded during this era. During the latter part of the Christian era, Qatar comprised a region known as 'Beth Qatraye' (Syriac for "house of the Qataris"). The region was not limited to Qatar; it also included Bahrain, Tarout Island, Al-Khatt, and Al-Hasa.

In 628, the Islamic prophet Muhammad sent a Muslim envoy to a ruler in eastern Arabia named Munzir ibn Sawa Al-Tamimi and requested that he and his subjects accept Islam. Munzir obliged his request, and accordingly most of the Arab tribes in the region converted to Islam. In the middle of the century, the Muslim conquest of Persia resulted in the fall of the Sasanian Empire.

Early and late Islamic period (661–1783)

850}}

Qatar was described as a famous horse and camel breeding centre during the Umayyad period. In the 8th century, it started benefiting from its commercially strategic position in the Persian Gulf and went on to become a centre of pearl trading. Substantial development in the pearling industry around the Qatari Peninsula occurred during the Abbasid period. Ships voyaging from Basra to India and China would make stops in Qatar's ports during this period. Chinese porcelain, West African coins, and artefacts from Thailand have been discovered in Qatar. Archaeological remains from the 9th century suggest that Qatar's inhabitants used greater wealth to construct higher quality homes and public buildings. Over 100 stone-built houses, two mosques, and an Abbasid fort were constructed in Murwab during this period. When the caliphate's prosperity declined in Iraq, so too did it in Qatar.

Qatar is mentioned in 13th-century Muslim scholar Yaqut al-Hamawi's book, Mu'jam Al-Buldan, which alludes to the Qataris' fine striped woven cloaks and their skills in improvement and finishing of spears.

Much of eastern Arabia was controlled by the Usfurids in 1253, but control of the region was seized by the prince of Ormus in 1320. Qatar's pearls provided the kingdom with one of its main sources of income.

Portuguese era (1507–1650)

In 1515, Manuel I of Portugal vassalised the Kingdom of Ormus. Portugal went on to seize a significant portion of eastern Arabia in 1521.

After the fall of the Jabrid Dynasty with the conquest of Bahrain by the Portuguese, the Arabian coast up to Al Hassa came under the rule and influence of the Portuguese empire. Attempts by the Ottomans to dominate the region were eliminated with the Portuguese reconquest of the castle of Tarout or Al Qatif in 1551. In 1550, the inhabitants of Al-Hasa had voluntarily submitted to the rule of the Ottomans, preferring them to the Portuguese.

Archaeological finds are still being excavated from one of the Portuguese fortresses that served as a base to dominate the region as Ruwayda. The first representation of Qatar appears on the Portuguese map by Luis Lázaro in 1563, showing the "city of Qatar" as a fortress, possibly referring to the fort of Ruwayda.

Having retained a negligible military presence in the area, the Ottomans were expelled by the Bani Khalid tribe and their emirate in 1670.

Bahraini and Saudi rule (1783–1868)

In 1766, members of the Al Khalifa family of the Utub tribal confederation migrated from Kuwait to Zubarah in Qatar. By the time of their arrival, the Bani Khalid exercised weak authority over the peninsula, notwithstanding the fact that the largest village was ruled by their distant kin. In 1783, Qatar-based Bani Utbah clans and allied Arab tribes invaded and annexed Bahrain from the Persians. The Al Khalifa imposed their authority over Bahrain and retained their jurisdiction over Zubarah.

Following his swearing-in as crown prince of the Emirate of Diriyah in 1788, Saud ibn Abd al-Aziz moved to expand Wahhabi territory eastward towards the Persian Gulf and Qatar. After defeating the Bani Khalid in 1795, the Wahhabi were attacked on two fronts. The Ottomans and Egyptians assaulted the western front, while the Al Khalifa in Bahrain and the Omanis launched an attack against the eastern front. Upon being made aware of the Egyptian advance on the western frontier in 1811, the Wahhabi amir reduced his garrisons in Bahrain and Zubarah in order to redeploy his troops. Said bin Sultan, Sultan of Muscat and Oman, capitalised on this opportunity and raided the Wahhabi garrisons on the eastern coast, setting fire to the fort in Zubarah. The Al Khalifa was effectively returned to power thereafter.

A partially restored section of the ruined town of [[Zubarah

As punishment for piracy, an East India Company vessel bombarded Doha in 1821, destroying the town and forcing hundreds of residents to flee. In 1825, the House of Thani was established with Sheikh Mohammed bin Thani as the first leader.

Although Qatar was considered a dependency of Bahrain, the Al Khalifa faced opposition from the local tribes. In 1867, the Al Khalifa, along with the ruler of Abu Dhabi, sent a massive naval force to Al Wakrah in an effort to crush the Qatari rebels. This resulted in the maritime Qatari–Bahraini War of 1867–68, in which Bahraini and Abu Dhabi forces sacked and looted Doha and Al Wakrah. The Bahraini hostilities were in violation of the Perpetual Truce of Peace and Friendship of 1861. The joint incursion, in addition to the Qatari counter-attack, prompted British Political Resident, Colonel Lewis Pelly to impose a settlement in 1868. His mission to Bahrain and Qatar and the resulting peace treaty were milestones because they implicitly recognised the distinctness of Qatar from Bahrain and explicitly acknowledged the position of Mohammed bin Thani. In addition to censuring Bahrain for its breach of agreement, Pelly negotiated with Qatari sheikhs who were represented by Mohammed bin Thani. The negotiations were the first stage in the development of Qatar as a sheikhdom.

Ottoman period (1871–1915)

Old city of Doha, January 1904

Under military and political pressure from the governor of the Ottoman Vilayet of Baghdad, Midhat Pasha, the ruling Al Thani tribe submitted to Ottoman rule in 1871. The Ottoman government imposed reformist (Tanzimat) measures concerning taxation and land registration to fully integrate these areas into the empire. In addition, the Ottomans supported the Ottoman subject Mohammed bin Abdul Wahab who attempted to supplant Al Thani as kaymakam of Qatar in 1888. This eventually led Al Thani to rebel against the Ottomans, whom he believed were seeking to usurp control of the peninsula. He resigned as kaymakam and stopped paying taxes in August 1892.

In February 1893, Mehmed Hafiz Pasha arrived in Qatar in the interests of seeking unpaid taxes and accosting Jassim bin Mohammed's opposition to proposed Ottoman administrative reforms. Fearing that he would face death or imprisonment, Jassim retreated to Al Wajbah (10 mi west of Doha), accompanied by several tribe members. Mehmed's demand that Jassim disband his troops and pledge his loyalty to the Ottomans was met with refusal. In March, Mehmed imprisoned Jassim's brother and 13 prominent Qatari tribal leaders on the Ottoman corvette Merrikh as punishment for his insubordination. After Mehmed declined an offer to release the captives for a fee of 10,000 liras, he ordered a column of approximately 200 troops to advance towards Jassim's Al Wajbah Fort under the command of Yusuf Effendi, thus signalling the start of the Battle of Al Wajbah.

Effendi's troops came under heavy gunfire by a sizable troop of Qatari infantry and cavalry shortly after arriving at Al Wajbah. They retreated to Shebaka fortress where they were again forced to draw back from a Qatari incursion. After they withdrew to Al Bidda fortress, Jassim's advancing column besieged the fortress, resulting in the Ottomans' concession of defeat and agreement to relinquish their captives in return for the safe passage of Mehmed Pasha's cavalry to Hofuf by land. Although Qatar did not gain full independence from the Ottoman Empire, the result of the battle forced a treaty that would later form the basis of Qatar's emerging as an autonomous country within the empire.

British period (1916–1971)

By the Anglo-Ottoman Convention of 1913, the Ottomans agreed to renounce their claim to Qatar and withdraw their garrison from Doha. With the outbreak of World War I however, nothing was done to carry this out, and the garrison remained in the fort at Doha, although its numbers dwindled as men deserted. In 1915, with the presence of British gunboats in the harbour, Abdullah bin Jassim Al Thani (who was pro-British) persuaded the remainder to abandon the fort, and when British troops approached the following morning, they found it deserted.

Qatar became a British protectorate on 3 November 1916 when the United Kingdom signed a treaty with Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim Al Thani to bring Qatar under its Trucial System of Administration. The treaty reserved foreign affairs and defence to the United Kingdom but allowed internal autonomy. While Abdullah agreed not to enter into any relations with any other power without the prior consent of the British government, the latter guaranteed the protection of Qatar from aggression by sea and provide its 'good offices' in the event of an attack by land. This latter undertaking was left deliberately vague.

On 5 May 1935, while agreeing an oil concession with the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, Abdullah signed another treaty with the British government which granted Qatar protection against internal and external threats. Oil reserves were first discovered in 1939. Exploitation and development were, however, delayed by World War II.

The focus of British interests in Qatar changed after the Second World War with the independence of India, the creation of Pakistan in 1947, and the development of oil in Qatar. In 1949, the appointment of the first British political officer in Doha, John Wilton, signified a strengthening of Anglo-Qatari relations. Oil exports began in 1949, and oil revenues became the country's main source of revenue; the pearl trade had gone into decline. These revenues were used to fund the expansion and modernisation of Qatar's infrastructure.

When Britain officially announced in 1968 that it would withdraw from the Persian Gulf in three years' time, Qatar joined talks with Bahrain and seven other Trucial States to create the Federation of Arab Emirates. Regional disputes, however, persuaded Qatar and Bahrain to withdraw from the talks and become independent states separate from the Trucial States, which went on to become the United Arab Emirates.

Independence and later (1971–2000)

Under an agreement with the United Kingdom, on 3 September 1971, the "special treaty arrangements" that were "inconsistent with full international responsibility as a sovereign and independent state" were terminated. Ahmad bin Ali was the emir of Qatar. He was deposed on 22 February 1972 by Khalifa bin Hamad.

In 1991, Qatar played a significant role in the Gulf War, particularly during the Battle of Khafji in which Qatari tanks rolled through the streets of the town and provided fire support for the Saudi Arabian National Guard units that were engaging Iraqi Army troops. Qatar allowed coalition troops from Canada to use the country as an airbase to launch aircraft on combat air patrol duty and also permitted air forces from the United States and France to operate in its territories.

In 1995, Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani seized control of the country from his father Khalifa bin Hamad Al Thani, with the support of the armed forces and cabinet, as well as neighbouring states and France. Under Emir Hamad, Qatar experienced a moderate degree of liberalisation, including the launch of the Al Jazeera television station in 1996, the endorsement of women's suffrage or right to vote in municipal elections in 1999, participation of women in society in 2003, drafting its first written constitution in 2005 and inauguration of a Roman Catholic church in 2008. An unsuccessful counter-coup was staged in 1996.

21st century

url-status=live }}</ref>

In 2003, Qatar served as the United States Central Command headquarters and one of the main launching sites of the invasion of Iraq to topple the government of Saddam Hussein. Shortly before the invasion, Qatari government offered sanctuary to Saddam. In March 2005, a suicide bombing killed a British teacher at the Doha Players Theatre, shocking the country, which had not previously experienced acts of terrorism. The bombing was carried out by Omar Ahmed Abdullah Ali, an Egyptian resident in Qatar who had suspected ties to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

The increased influence of Qatar and its role during the Arab Spring, especially during the 2011 uprisings in Bahrain against King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, worsened longstanding tensions with Saudi Arabia, the neighbouring United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain. In 2011, Qatar joined NATO operations in Libya and reportedly armed Libyan opposition groups against Muammar Gaddafi. It was also a major funder of weapons for rebel groups in the Syrian civil war against Bashar al-Assad. Qatar participated in the Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen against the Houthis and forces loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

In June 2017, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Egypt and Yemen broke diplomatic ties with Qatar, accusing Qatar of supporting terrorism. The crisis escalated a dispute over Qatar's support of the Muslim Brotherhood, which is considered a terrorist organisation by some Arab nations. Qatar was expelled from the anti-Houthi coalition. The diplomatic crisis ended in January 2021 with the signing of AlUla declaration.

On 2 December 2010, Qatar won the right to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup, making it the first country in the Middle East to be selected to host the tournament. The awarding increased further investment and developments within the nation during the 2010s. In June 2013, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani became the emir of Qatar after his father handed over power. Sheikh Tamim has prioritised improving the domestic welfare of citizens, which includes establishing advanced healthcare and education systems, and expanding the country's infrastructure in preparation for the hosting of the 2022 World Cup. Qatar hosted the 2022 FIFA World Cup from 21 November to 18 December, becoming the first Arab and Muslim-majority country to do so, and the third Asian country to host it following the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Japan and South Korea.

Geography

Main article: Geography of Qatar

Qatar is the fifth most water-stressed country in the world.

The Qatari peninsula protrudes 100 mi into the Persian Gulf, north of Saudi Arabia. It lies between latitudes 24° and 27° N, and longitudes 50° and 52° E. Most of the country consists of a low, barren plain, covered with sand. To the southeast lies the Khor al Adaid ("Inland Sea"), an area of rolling sand dunes surrounding an inlet of the Persian Gulf.

The highest point is Qurayn Abu al Bawl at 103 m in the Jebel Dukhan to the west, a range of low limestone outcroppings running north–south from Zekreet 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.

Qatar's geography is defined by its flat, dry desert scenery and sunshine all year. The winters are mild, with average temperatures of 18.5 C in January, and the summers are very hot, with temperatures often reaching 40 C. The country only gets 70 mm of rain a year on average, and most of that falls between October and March. These weather conditions make it possible to enjoy outdoor sports and travel for most of the year.

Biodiversity

Qatar became part of the Rio Convention on Biological Diversity in 1996. It subsequently produced a National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan in 2005. A total of 142 fungal species have been recorded from Qatar. A book recently produced by the Ministry of Environment documents the lizards known or believed to occur in Qatar, based on surveys conducted by an international team of scientists and other collaborators.

Like other members of the UNFCCC Qatar is supposed to publish details of its greenhouse gas emissions two years after they occur – however as of 2024 the latest official details are for 2007 emissions. According to the Emissions Database for Global Atmospheric Research, carbon dioxide emissions per person average over 30 tonnes, one of the highest in the world.

Climate

Sea Climate Data For DohaMonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYearAverage sea temperature °C (°F)Source:
21.0}}"21.0
(69.8)19.4}}"19.4
(66.9)20.9}}"20.9
(69.6)23.3}}"23.3
(73.9)27.8}}"27.8
(82)30.5}}"30.5
(86.9)32.4}}"32.4
(90.3)33.6}}"33.6
(92.5)32.8}}"32.8
(91)30.8}}"30.8
(87.4)27.5}}"27.5
(81.5)23.5}}"23.5
(74.3)26.9}}"26.9
(80.5)

Politics

Main article: Politics of Qatar

Emir since 2013 Prime Minister since 2023

Qatar is officially a constitutional monarchy, but the wide powers retained by the monarchy have it bordering an absolute monarchy and autocracy ruled by the Al Thani family. The Al Thani dynasty has been ruling Qatar since the family house was established in 1825.

The eighth emir of Qatar is Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. The emir has the exclusive power to appoint the prime minister and cabinet ministers who, together, constitute the Council of Ministers, which is the supreme executive authority in the country. The Council of Ministers also initiates legislation.

Elections

In 2003, Qatar adopted a constitution that provided for the direct election of 30 of the 45 members of a legislature. However, the legislature has limited powers to reject legislation and dismiss ministers. The government remains authoritarian. The assembly held its first general election in October 2021 after several postponements, but in November 2024 it went back to being fully appointed by the emir, ending the country's "short-lived experiment in electing members of the advisory Shura Council".

According to the 2025 Democracy Report of V-Dem Democracy indices, Qatar was second-last on the Electoral Democracy Index among Middle Eastern countries, and seventh-last worldwide from among the 179 countries rated. Qatari law does not permit the establishment of political bodies or trade unions. Additionally, according to International IDEA’s Global State of Democracy (GSoD) Indices and Democracy Tracker, Qatar performs in the low range on overall democratic measures, with particular weaknesses in political representation, including credible elections, inclusive suffrage and effective parliament.

Law

According to Qatar's Constitution, Sharia law is the main source of Qatari legislation, although in practice Qatar's legal system is a mixture of civil law and Sharia. Sharia is applied to family law, inheritance, and several criminal acts (including adultery, robbery, and murder). In some cases, Sharia-based family courts treat a female's testimony as being worth half that of a man. Codified family law was introduced in 2006. Islamic polygyny is permitted.

Judicial corporal punishment is a punishment in Qatar. Only Muslims considered medically fit are liable to have such sentences carried out. Flogging is employed as a punishment for alcohol consumption or illicit sexual relations. Article 88 of the criminal code declares that the penalty for adultery is 100 lashes. Stoning is a legal punishment in Qatar, and apostasy and homosexuality are crimes punishable by the death penalty; however, the penalty has not been carried out for either crime. Blasphemy can result in up to seven years in prison, while proselytising can incur a 10-year sentence.

Alcohol consumption is partially legal; some five-star luxury hotels are allowed to sell alcohol to non-Muslim customers. Muslims are not allowed to consume alcohol, and those caught consuming it are liable to flogging or deportation. Non-Muslim expatriates can obtain a permit to purchase alcohol for personal consumption. The Qatar Distribution Company (a subsidiary of Qatar Airways) is permitted to import alcohol and pork; it operates the only liquor store in the country, which also sells pork to holders of liquor licences. Qatari officials had indicated a willingness to allow alcohol in "fan zones" at the 2022 FIFA World Cup. However, on 18 November, two days before the start of the games, Qatari officials announced alcoholic beverages would not be permitted within the stadiums.

In 2014, a modesty campaign was launched to remind tourists of the country's restrictive dress code. Female tourists were advised not to wear leggings, miniskirts, sleeveless dresses, or short or tight clothing in public. Men were warned against wearing shorts and singlets.

Administrative divisions

Main article: Municipalities of Qatar

Qatar is divided into eight municipalities: The municipalities are further subdivided into 98 zones, which are in turn subdivided into blocks.

Municipalities of Qatar as of 2014
KeyMunicipality
(Baladiyah)Capital
1Al ShamalMadinat ash Shamal
2Al KhorAl Khor City
3Al-ShahaniyaAl-Shahaniya City
4Umm SalalUmm Salal Ali
5Al DaayenUmm Qarn
6Doha (municipality)Doha
7Al RayyanAl Rayyan City
8Al WakrahAl Wakrah

Foreign relations

Main article: Foreign relations of Qatar

work=The New York Times}}</ref> Diplomatic missions to Qatar are based in its capital, Doha.

Since 2022, it has been a major non-NATO ally of the United States. Qatar also has particularly strong ties with France, China, Iran, Turkey, as well as a number of Islamist movements in the Middle East such as the Muslim Brotherhood. The country is an early member of OPEC and a founding member of the Gulf Cooperation Council, as well as a member of the Arab League. The country has led numerous investments and economic cooperations with Iraq, Syria and Palestine. Qatar supported opposition groups in Libya and Syria and participated in Saudi-led intervention in Yemen against the Houthis and forces loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh. In 2022, four people were arrested because of corruption. This came to be known as the Qatar corruption scandal at the European Parliament.

Since the 2000s, Qatar increasingly emerged on a wider foreign policy stage especially as a mediator for Middle Eastern conflicts. Qatar mediated between the rival Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas in 2006 and helped unite Lebanese leaders into forming a political agreement during the 2008 crisis. It has also emerged as mediators in African and Asian affairs, notably holding a peace process for Sudan amid the Darfur conflict and facilitating peace talks for Afghanistan, setting up a political "office" for Taliban to facilitate talks. Ahmed Rashid, writing in the Financial Times, stated that through the office Qatar has "facilitated meetings between the Taliban and many countries and organisations, including the U.S state department, the UN, Japan, several European governments and non-governmental organisations, all of whom have been trying to push forward the idea of peace talks." It played a major role in establishing the first ceasefire in the Gaza war and the concurrent initial hostage exchange. These high-risk diplomatic middle man endeavours (and its own rigorous defence stance) have thus earned it a reputation as "a prickly Switzerland".

On 2 October 2020, Qatari authorities strip-searched 13 Australian women on a plane at Hamad International Airport over a premature baby found in a bathroom at the terminal. This caused an international incident with Australia. In September 2023, Qatar mediated the US-Iran prisoners swap deal. Iran freed five Americans in exchange for five Iranians held in the US and transfer $6 billion in frozen Iranian money from South Korea to Qatar. In October 2023 United States President Joe Biden thanked the Qatar's Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani for his help in mediating a landmark prisoner swap deal with Iran. On 24 September 2024, Qatar was designated as the first Gulf country to join the U.S. Visa Waiver Program (VWP), allowing its citizens to travel to the United States for up to 90 days for business or tourism without a visa. The inclusion strengthens security cooperation between the two nations and eases travel for Qatari citizens. U.S. citizens are now permitted to stay in Qatar for up to 90 days without a visa, an increase from the previous 30-day limit.

Military

Main article: Qatar Armed Forces

The Qatar Armed Forces consist of 12,000 personnel in the Qatari Emiri Land Forces, 2,500 in the Navy, 2,000 in the Air Force, and 5,000 in the Internal Security Forces. In 2008 Qatar spent US$2.6 billion on its military, which was 2% of the GDP, and its military spending increased to US$7.49 billion as of 2022. After the Arab spring events in 2011 and a diplomatic incident with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries in 2014, Qatar started expanding its armed forces. The country introduced conscription in 2013, the first Gulf state to do so in recent years. It is mandatory for Qatari male citizens to serve for up to 4 months, though not all of them are called up. The national service term was extended to one year in 2018. About 2,000 conscripts pass through the Qatar Armed Forces annually. Military service has become more popular in Qatar due to the recent tensions with Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Since 2017, Qatar has also purchased large quantities of equipment from European countries and the United States, making its air force one of the largest among the Gulf states.

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) found that in 2010–2014 Qatar was the 46th-largest arms importer in the world. SIPRI writes that Qatar's plans to transform and significantly enlarge its armed forces have accelerated. In 2015, Qatar was the 16th largest arms importer in the world, and in 2016, it was the 11th largest, according to SIPRI.

Qatar has signed defense pacts with the United States, the United Kingdom, and France. The forward headquarters of United States Central Command, Al Udeid Air Base, is located in Qatar and houses about 10,000 American military personnel.

During the 2011 military intervention in Libya, Qatar deployed six Mirage 2000 fighter jets to assist the NATO air campaign against the Libyan government and special forces to provide training to Libyan rebels. During the Saudi-led intervention in the Yemeni civil war in September 2015, Qatar sent 1,000 troops, 200 armored vehicles, and 30 Apache helicopters to assist with Saudi military operations. As a result of the diplomatic crisis with Saudi Arabia that began in June 2017, Qatar withdrew its forces from Yemen. Qatar is the 29th most peaceful country in the world, according to the 2024 Global Peace Index.

According to research published in November 2024, Qatar has dramatically increased its military power, as its expenditure grew by 434%. Corruption in arms trading, especially bribery, has been one consequence.

Human rights

Migrant workers in Doha, 2014

Qatar's human rights record has been regarded by academics and non-governmental organisations as being generally poor, with restrictions on civil liberties such as the freedoms of association, expression and the press, as well as its treatment of thousands of migrant workers amounting to forced labour for projects in the country.

In May 2012, Qatari officials declared their intention to allow the establishment of an independent trade union. In 2014, Qatar commissioned international law firm DLA Piper to produce a report investigating the immigrant labour system. In May 2014, DLA Piper released more than 60 recommendations for reforming the kafala system including the abolition of exit visas and the introduction of a minimum wage, which Qatar has pledged to implement. Qatar also announced it would scrap its sponsor system for foreign labour, which requires that all foreign workers be sponsored by local employers.

The UN Committee Against Torture found that the provisions for flogging and stoning within the Qatari criminal code constituted a breach of the obligations imposed by the UN Convention Against Torture. Homosexual acts are illegal and can be punished by death. However, there is no such evidence that the death penalty has been given for same-sex relations due to homosexual acts.

Under the provisions of Qatar's sponsorship law, sponsors had the unilateral power to cancel workers' residency permits, deny workers' ability to change employers, report a worker as "absconded" to police authorities, and deny permission to leave the country. As a result, sponsors may restrict workers' movements, and workers may be afraid to report abuses or claim their rights. According to the ITUC, the visa sponsorship system allows the exaction of forced labour by making it difficult for a migrant worker to leave an abusive employer or travel overseas without permission. Qatar also did not maintain wage standards for its immigrant labourers. Additional changes to labour laws include a provision guaranteeing that all workers' salaries are paid directly into their bank accounts and new restrictions on working outdoors in the hottest hours during the summer.

In 2016 laws were reformed to mandate that companies that fail to pay workers' wages on time could temporarily lose their ability to hire more employees. Human Rights Watch claimed that the changes might fail to address some labour rights issues. A minimum wage was instituted in 2021. The country enfranchised women at the same time as men in connection with the 1999 elections for a Central Municipal Council. These elections—the first-ever in Qatar—were intentionally held on 8 March 1999, International Women's Day.

As of 2024 Qatar is still ranked 40 out of 180 countries in the Corruption Perceptions Index. As of 2025 Qatar continues to face global criticism for ongoing labor abuses. Many migrant employees still suffer wage theft and harsh work, and they cannot form unions. Women and LGBTQ+ people face legal and social discrimination. The United Nations has issued hundreds of human rights recommendations to Qatar. The country also limits free speech and peaceful assembly.

Labour rights and reforms

Qatar has made a lot of changes to improve workers' rights, especially for foreign workers, who make up most of the workforce. In the past few years, the country got rid of the controversial kafala system, set a minimum wage for 2021, and put in place steps to make sure workers got paid on time. These changes are in line with Qatar's National Vision 2030 and are meant to make working conditions better as the country becomes more famous around the world. Reforms have been praised at international events like the UN Least Developed Countries 5 meeting (LDC5), showing that Qatar is serious about fixing labor problems and improving its economy at the same time.

Economy

Main article: Economy of Qatar

High-rise buildings in [[Doha

Before the discovery of oil, the economy focused on fishing and pearl hunting. A report prepared by local governors of the Ottoman Empire in 1892 states that income from pearl hunting in 1892 is 2,450,000 kran. After the introduction of the Japanese cultured pearl onto the world market in the 1920s and 1930s, Qatar's pearling industry crashed. Oil was discovered in Qatar in 1940, in Dukhan Field. The discovery transformed the state's economy. Now, the country has a high standard of living for its legal citizens. With no income tax, Qatar has one of the lowest tax rates in the world. The unemployment rate in June 2013 was 0.1%. Corporate law mandates that Qatari nationals must hold 51% of any venture in the emirate.

, Qatar has the fourth highest GDP per capita in the world, according to the International Monetary Fund. It relies heavily on foreign labor to grow its economy, to the extent that migrant workers compose 86% of the population and 94% of the workforce. Economic growth has been almost exclusively based on its petroleum and natural gas industries, which began in 1940. Qatar is the leading exporter of liquefied natural gas. In 2012, it was estimated that Qatar would invest over $120 billion in the energy sector in the next 10 years. The country was a member state of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), having joined in 1961, and having left in January 2019.

In 2012, Qatar retained its title of richest country in the world (according to per capita income) for the third time in a row, having first overtaken Luxembourg in 2010. According to the study published by the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, the per capita GDP at purchasing power parity (PPP) was $106,000 (QR387,000) in 2012, helping the country retain its ranking as the world's wealthiest nation. Luxembourg came a distant second with nearly $80,000 and Singapore third with per capita income of about $61,000.The research put Qatar's GDP at $182bn in 2012 and said it had climbed to an all-time high due to soaring gas exports and high oil prices. Its population stood at 1.8 million in 2012.

Business district in [[Doha

Established in 2005, Qatar Investment Authority is the country's sovereign wealth fund, specialising in foreign investment. In 2012, with assets of $115bn, QIA was ranked 12th among the richest sovereign wealth funds in the world. With billions of dollars in surpluses from the oil and gas industry, the Qatari government has directed investments into United States, Europe, and Asia Pacific. Qatar Holding is the international investment arm of QIA. Since 2009, Qatar Holding has received $30–40bn per year from the state. , it has investments around the world in Valentino, Siemens, Printemps, Harrods, The Shard, Barclays Bank, Heathrow Airport, Paris Saint-Germain F.C., Volkswagen Group, Royal Dutch Shell, Bank of America, Tiffany, Agricultural Bank of China, Sainsbury's, BlackBerry, and Santander Brasil.

The country has no taxes on non-companies, but authorities have announced plans to levy taxes on junk food and luxury items. The taxes would be implemented on goods that harm the human body—for example, fast food, tobacco products, and soft drinks. The rollout of these initial taxes is believed to be the result of the fall in oil prices and a deficit that the country faced in 2016. Additionally, the country saw job cuts in 2016 from its petroleum companies and other sectors in the government.

As part of Qatar National Vision 2030, the country is making its economy less dependent on oil and gas by expanding its range of industries. Funds are being put into projects related to schooling, tourism, and green energy. Qatar is putting a lot of effort into green energy. By 2030, they want 20% of their energy to come from solar power. As part of the economic transformation, the tourist industry is growing, which helps the GDP grow and makes the country less reliant on oil exports.

Energy

Main article: Energy in Qatar

As of 2016, Qatar's proven oil reserves were estimated at 25.2 billion barrels, positioning it as the 13th largest globally, accounting for approximately 1.53% of the world's total reserves.

During the 1980s, Qatar's economy faced a downturn from 1982 to 1989 due to OPEC-imposed quotas on crude oil production and declining oil prices, which led to reduced oil earnings. This economic strain forced the Qatari government to cut spending, resulting in a recessionary business climate and layoffs of expatriate staff. Despite these challenges, the late 1980s saw improvements, with profits around QR420 million in 1989 and increased production in sectors like ethylene and sulfur.

The 1990s marked a period of economic recovery, driven by the development of the North Field, one of the world's largest natural gas fields. This development attracted a growing expatriate workforce, particularly from Egypt and South Asia, contributing to the country's economic diversification and growth.

Qatar's proven reserves of gas are the third-largest in the world, exceeding 250 trillion cubic feet (7,000 km3). The economy was boosted in 1991 by completion of the $1.5-billion Phase I of North Field gas development. In 1996, the Qatargas project began exporting liquefied natural gas to Japan.

Qatar's heavy industrial projects, all based in Umm Said, include a refinery with a 50,000 barrels (8,000 m3) per day capacity, a fertiliser plant for urea and ammonia, a steel plant, and a petrochemical plant. All these industries use gas for fuel. Most are joint ventures between European and Japanese firms and the state-owned QatarEnergy. The US is the major equipment supplier for Qatar's oil and gas industry, and US companies are playing a major role in North Field gas development.

[[Mesaieed Industrial Area

In 2008 Qatar launched its National Vision 2030 which highlights environmental development as one of the four main goals for Qatar over the next two decades. The National Vision pledges to develop sustainable alternatives to oil-based energy to preserve the local and global environment. Qatar has made investment in renewable resources a major goal for the country over the next two decades. By 2030, Qatar has set the goal of attaining 20% of its energy from solar power. The country is well-positioned to capitalise on photovoltaic systems, as it has a global horizontal irradiance value of approximately 2,140 kWh per square meter annually. Furthermore, the direct irradiance parameter is roughly 2,008 kWh per square meter annually, implying that it would be able to benefit from concentrated solar power as well. Qatar Foundation has been active in helping the solar power goals. It established Qatar Solar, which, together with Qatar Development Bank and German company SolarWorld, embarked on a joint venture resulting in the creation of Qatar Solar Technologies (QSTec). In 2017, QSTec commissioned its polysilicon plant in Ras Laffan. This plant has a capacity of 1.1 MW of solar power.

Qatar pursues a vigorous programme of "Qatarisation", under which all joint venture industries and government departments strive to move Qatari nationals into positions of greater authority. Growing numbers of foreign-educated Qataris, including many educated in the US, are returning home to assume key positions formerly occupied by expatriates. To control the influx of expatriate workers, Qatar has tightened the administration of its foreign manpower programmes over the past several years. Security is the principal basis for Qatar's strict entry and immigration rules and regulations.

Tourism

Main article: List of tourist attractions in Qatar

Qatar is one of the fastest growing countries in the field of tourism. According to the World Tourism rankings, more than 2.3 million international tourists visited in 2017. Qatar has become one of the most open countries in the Middle East due to its recent visa facilitation improvements, including allowing nationals of 88 countries to enter visa-free and free-of charge. Qatar was recently put in the top eight in market climate in the Middle East by the Travel & Tourism Competitiveness Survey 2019 of the World Economic Forum.

Doha is one of the fastest-growing hotel and hospitality markets in the world. The $220 billion spent on infrastructure since the successful World Cup bid of 2010 has helped boost the industry. Hotels have also been helped by the country’s geographic location. The tourism sector continues to witness a strong recovery with more than 729,000 international visitors in the first half of 2022, marking a 19% increase compared to the full year of 2021, and the aim is to raise tourism to 12% of GDP by 2030. The tourist industry in Doha has grown rapidly, making it a hub for international tourists. The Museum of Islamic Art, Souq Waqif, and the Katara Cultural Village are among the most popular places to visit. Nationals of 88 countries are able to enter Qatar without a visa, making it one of the most accessible destinations in the Middle East. The government has set goals to increase the share of tourism towards its GDP to 12% by 2030, contributed to by its hosting of major sporting events such as the 2022 FIFA World Cup and the upcoming 2030 Asian Games.

The nation is also on course to experience a major jump in athletic and corporate tourism with hosting world-class tournaments such as the 2030 Asian Games and the 2022 FIFA World Cup. Qatar Airways, as well as Hamad International Airport, provide travelers with one of the best transportation services in the world, and this has increased tourism in Qatar. Gulf News, a research center in Qatar, by examining the statistics of recent years and upcoming events, has predicted that the country will earn 11 billion and 900 million dollars from attracting foreign travelers by 2020. The reason for this upward trend is the increase in hospitality and attention to the country's culture in Qatar.

Transport

Main article: Transport in Qatar, Geography of Qatar

Qatar has significantly developed its transportation infrastructure to enhance global connectivity and support economic growth. Key developments include expansions of Hamad International Airport (HIA), enhancements to Qatar Airways' fleet, and the development of Hamad Port.

HIA has undergone substantial expansions to accommodate increasing passenger traffic. The first phase, launched in 2022, introduced a new terminal, hotel, and the ORCHARD tropical garden. The subsequent phase aims to boost capacity to 70 million passengers and includes a new cargo terminal. It has won Airline of the Year in 2011, 2012, 2015, 2017 and 2019 and employs more than 46,000 people.

Qatar Airways plans to place a significant aircraft order to increase annual passenger numbers from 50 million to 80 million over the next five to six years. This expansion is expected to enhance the airline's global network and services.

Qatar is increasingly activating its logistics and ports in order to participate in trade between Europe and China or Africa. For this purpose, ports such as Hamad Port are rapidly expanded and investments are made in their technology. The country is historically and currently part of the Maritime Silk Road that runs from the Chinese coast to the south via the southern tip of India to Mombasa, from there through the Red Sea via the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean, there to the Upper Adriatic region to the northern Italian hub of Trieste with its rail connections to Central Europe, Eastern Europe and the North Sea. Hamad Port is Qatar's main seaport, located south of Doha in the Umm Al Houl area. Construction of the port began in 2010; it became operational in December 2016. Capable of handling up to 7.8 million tonnes of products annually, the bulk of trade which passes through the port consists of food and building materials. On the northern coast, Ras Laffan Port serves as the most extensive liquid natural gas export facility in the world.

Qatar has made significant progress in public transportation, with the Doha Metro being one of the most important components of the system. The metro system connects important parts of the capital, like Hamad International Airport and major business hubs, providing a convenient method of transportation. More expansions are being planned by Qatar Rail to improve connections across the area.

Demographics

Main article: Demographics of Qatar

The number of people in Qatar fluctuates considerably depending on the season, since the country relies heavily on migrant labour. In 2020, the population was over 2.8 million, with foreigners making up a vast majority. Only around 340,000 (12%) were Qatari citizens, while the remaining 2.5 million were expatriates.

Qatar's first demographic records date back to 1892, conducted by Ottoman governors in the region. Based on this census, which includes only the residents in cities, the population in 1892 was 9,830. At the time of the first census, held in 1970, the population was 111,133. The 2020 census recorded the total population at 2,846,118, of which 2,034,518 were males and 811,600 females. The influx of male labourers has skewed the gender balance, and women are now just one-quarter of the population.

Languages

Arabic is the official language, with Qatari Arabic being the local dialect. Qatari Sign Language is the language of the native Qatari deaf community. English is commonly used as a second language, and a rising lingua franca, especially in commerce, to the extent that steps are being taken to try to preserve Arabic from English's encroachment. English is particularly useful for communication with Qatar's large expatriate community. In the medical community, and in situations such as the training of nurses to work in Qatar, English acts as a lingua franca. Reflecting the multicultural make-up of the country, many other languages are also spoken, including Malayalam, Persian, Baluchi, Brahui, Hindi, Urdu, Pashto, Kannada, Tamil, Telugu, Nepali, Sinhalese, Bengali, Tagalog, Tulu and Indonesian.

Religion

Main article: Religion in Qatar, Freedom of religion in Qatar

Mosque in Qatar

Islam is predominant and is the state religion, although it is not the only religion practiced in the country, and the constitution guarantees freedom to practise any faith within "moral" bounds. Most citizens belong to the Salafi Muslim movement of Wahhabism, and 5–15% of Muslims follow Shia Islam with other Islamic sects being very small in number. In 2020, Qatar's total population (citizens and non-citizens alike) was 75.9% Muslim, 12.5% Christian and 10.6% Hindu; while other religions and religiously unaffiliated people accounted for the remaining 0.9%.

Sharia is the main source of legislation according to the constitution. Qatar's interpretation of Sharia is said to be not as "strict" as neighbouring Saudi Arabia but not as "liberal" as Dubai. The vision of the Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs is "to build a contemporary Islamic society along with fostering the Sharee’ah [Sharia] and cultural heritage".

The non-Muslim population is composed almost entirely of non-citizens. Since 2008, Christians have been allowed to build churches on ground donated by the government, Active churches include the Mar Thoma Church, Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, the Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady of the Rosary and the Anglican Church of the Epiphany. There are also two Mormon wards and a Baháʼí Faith community.

Education

Main article: Education in Qatar

Qatar hired the RAND Corporation to reform its K–12 education system.

The illiteracy rate was 3.1% for males and 4.2% for females in 2012, the lowest in the Arabic-speaking world and 86th in the world. Citizens are required to attend government-provided education from kindergarten through high school. Qatar University, founded in 1973, is the country's oldest and largest institution of higher education.

In November 2002, Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani created The Supreme Education Council. 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" initiative which was established to try to position Qatar as a leader in education reform. According to the Webometrics Ranking of World Universities, the top-ranking universities in the country are Qatar University (1,881st worldwide), Texas A&M University at Qatar (3,905th) and Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar (6,855th).

In 2009, Qatar established the Qatar Science & Technology Park in Education City to link those universities with industry. Education City is also home to a fully accredited international Baccalaureate school, Qatar Academy. In addition, two Canadian institutions, the College of the North Atlantic (headquarters in Newfoundland and Labrador) and the University of Calgary, have inaugurated campuses in Doha. Other for-profit universities have also established campuses in the city.

In 2012, Qatar was ranked third from the bottom of the 65 OECD countries participating in the PISA test of mathematics, reading and skills for 15- and 16-year-olds, despite having the highest per capita income in the world. Qatar was ranked 48th in the Global Innovation Index in 2025, up from 65th in 2019.

As part of its national development strategy, Qatar has outlined a 10-year strategic plan to improve the level of education. The government has launched educational outreach programs, such as Al-Bairaq. Al-Bairaq was launched in 2010 aims to provide high school students with an opportunity to experience a research environment in the Center for Advanced Materials in Qatar University. The program encompasses the STEM fields and languages.

Launched in 2006 as part of an initiative of the Qatar Foundation, the Qatar National Research Fund was created with the intent of securing public funds for scientific research. The fund functions as a means to diversify its economy from a primarily oil and gas-based one to a knowledge-based economy. The Qatar Science & Technology Park (QSTP) was established by Qatar Foundation in March 2009 as an attempt to assist the country's transition towards a knowledge economy. With a seed capital of $800 million and initially hosting 21 organizations, the QSTP became Qatar's first free-trade zone.

Health

Main article: Health in Qatar

Healthcare standards are generally high. Qatari citizens are covered by a national health-insurance plan, while expatriates must either receive health insurance from their employers, or in the case of the self-employed, purchase insurance. Government healthcare spending is among the highest in the Middle East, with $4.7 billion being invested in healthcare in 2014. This was a $2.1 billion increase from 2010. The premier healthcare provider is Hamad Medical Corporation, established by the government as a non-profit healthcare provider, which runs a network of hospitals, ambulance services, and a home healthcare service, all of which are accredited by the Joint Commission.

In 2010, spending on healthcare accounted for 2.2% of the country's GDP; the highest in the Middle East. In 2006, there were 23.12 physicians and 61.81 nurses per 10,000 inhabitants. The life expectancy at birth was 82.08 years in 2014, or 83.27 years for males and 77.95 years for females, rendering it the highest life expectancy in the Middle East. Qatar has a low infant mortality rate of 7 in 100,000.

In 2006, there were 25 beds per 10,000 people, and 27.6 doctors and 73.8 nurses per 10,000 people. In 2011, the number of beds decreased to 12 per 10,000 people, whereas the number of doctors increased to 28 per 10,000 people. While the country has one of the lowest proportions of hospital beds in the region, the availability of physicians is the highest in the GCC.

Culture

Main article: Culture of Qatar

The culture of Qatar is similar to other countries in Eastern Arabia, being significantly influenced by Islam. Qatar National Day, hosted annually on 18 December, has had an important role in developing a sense of national identity. It is observed in remembrance of Jassim bin Mohammed Al Thani's succession to the throne and his subsequent unification of the country's various tribes.

The Doha Cultural Festival is one of the cultural activities carried out annually by the Qatari Ministry of Culture, Arts and Heritage, which began in 2002 with the aim of spreading Qatari culture inside and outside Qatar.

Arts

Main article: Collecting practices of the Al-Thani Family, Qatari art, Public art in Qatar

Qatari officials, especially the Al Thani family and the sister of the Emir of Qatar, Al-Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, pay special attention to art. Al-Mayassa leads the Qatar Museums Authority. The Museum of Islamic Art, opened in 2008, is regarded as one of the best museums in the region. This and several other Qatari museums, like the Arab Museum of Modern Art, fall under the Qatar Museums Authority, which also sponsors artistic events abroad, such as major exhibitions by Takahashi Murakami in Versailles (2010) and Damien Hirst in London (2012).

Qatar is the world's biggest buyer in the art market by value. The Qatari cultural sector is being developed to enable the country to reach world recognition to contribute to the development of a country that comes mainly from its resources from the gas industry.

Literature

Qatari literature traces its origins back to the 19th century. Originally, written poetry was the most common form of expression. Abdul Jalil Al-Tabatabai and Mohammed bin Abdullah bin Uthaymeen, two poets dating back to the early 19th century, formed the corpus of Qatar's earliest written poetry. Poetry later fell out of favour after Qatar began reaping the profits from oil exports in the mid-20th century and many Qataris abandoned their Bedouin traditions in favour of more urban lifestyles.

Due to the increasing number of Qataris who began receiving formal education during the 1950s and other significant societal changes, 1970 witnessed the introduction of the first short story anthology, and in 1993 the first locally authored novels were published. Poetry, particularly the predominant nabati form, retained some importance but would soon be overshadowed by other literary types. Unlike in most other forms of art in Qatari society, women have been involved in the modern literature movement to a similar extent to men.

Media

Main article: Mass media in Qatar

Qatar's media was classified as "not free" in the 2014 Freedom of the Press report by Freedom House. Television broadcasting started in 1970 with the inauguration of Qatar TV. Al Jazeera is a main television network headquartered in Doha. Al Jazeera initially launched in 1996 as an Arabic news and current affairs satellite TV channel of the same name and has since expanded into a global network of several speciality TV channels.

It has been reported that journalists practice self-censorship, particularly in regards to the government and ruling family of Qatar. Criticism of the government, emir, and ruling family in the media is illegal. According to article 46 of the press law "The Emir of the state of Qatar shall not be criticised and no statement can be attributed to him unless under a written permission from the manager of his office." Journalists are also subject to prosecution for insulting Islam.

In 2014, a Cybercrime Prevention Law was passed. The law is said to restrict press freedom and carries prison sentences and fines for broad reasons such as jeopardising local peace or publishing false news. The Gulf Center for Human Rights has stated that the law is a threat to freedom of speech and has called for certain articles of the law to be revoked.

Press media has undergone expansion in recent years. There are currently seven newspapers in circulation in Qatar, with four being published in Arabic and three being published in English. There are also newspapers from India, Nepal and Sri Lanka with editions printed from Qatar.

In regards to telecommunication infrastructure, Qatar is the highest-ranked Middle Eastern country in the World Economic Forum's Network Readiness Index (NRI)—an indicator for determining the development level of a country's information and communication technologies. Qatar ranked number 23 overall in the 2014 NRI ranking, unchanged from 2013.

Music

The music of Qatar is based on Bedouin poetry, song and dance. Traditional dances in Doha are performed on Friday afternoons; one such dance is the Ardah, a stylised martial dance performed by two rows of dancers who are accompanied by an array of percussion instruments, including al-ras (a large drum whose leather is heated by an open fire), tambourines and cymbals with small drums. Other percussion instruments used in folk music include galahs (a tall clay jar) and tin drinking cups known as tus or tasat, usually used in conjunction with a tabl, a longitudinal drum beaten with a stick. String instruments, such as the oud and rebaba, are also commonly used.

Sport

[[Lusail Sports Arena

Association football is the most popular sport in Qatar, both in terms of players and spectators. Shortly after the Qatar Football Association became affiliated with FIFA in 1970, one of the country's earliest international accolades came in 1981 when the Qatar national under-20 team's emerged as runners-up to West Germany in that year's edition of the FIFA World Youth Championship after being defeated 4–0 in the final. At the senior level, Qatar has played host to three editions of the AFC Asian Cup; the first being the ninth edition in 1988, the second being the fifteenth edition held in 2011, and the third being the eighteenth edition held in 2023. For the first time in the country's history, the Qatar national football team won the AFC Asian Cup in the 2019 edition hosted in the United Arab Emirates, beating Japan 3–1 in the final. They won all seven of their matches, conceding only a single goal throughout the tournament. As hosts and defending champions in the following 2023 edition, Qatar successfully retained their title, defeating Jordan in the final.

On 2 December 2010, Qatar won their bid to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup, despite never previously qualifying for the FIFA World Cup Finals. Local organisers built seven new stadiums and expanded one existing stadium for this event. Qatar's winning bid for the 2022 World Cup was greeted enthusiastically in the Persian Gulf region as it was the first time a country in the Middle East had been selected to host the tournament. At the same time, the bid was embroiled in much controversy, including allegations of bribery and interference in the investigation of the alleged bribery. European football associations also objected to the 2022 World Cup being held in Qatar for a variety of reasons, from the impact of warm temperatures on players' fitness, to the disruption it might cause in European domestic league calendars should the event be rescheduled to take place during winter. In May 2014, Qatari football official Mohammed bin Hammam was accused of making payments totalling £3 million to officials in return for their support for the Qatar bid. A FIFA inquiry into the bidding process in November 2014 cleared Qatar of any wrongdoing.

[[2015 Ladies Tour of Qatar
[[Al-Rayyan Stadium

The Guardian, a British national daily newspaper, produced a short documentary named "Abuse and exploitation of migrant workers preparing emirate for 2022". A 2014 investigation by The Guardian reported that migrant workers who had been constructing luxurious offices for the organisers of the 2022 World Cup had not been paid in over a year, and were now "working illegally from cockroach-infested lodgings". For 2014, Nepalese migrants involved in constructing infrastructure for the 2022 World Cup died at a rate of one every two days. The Qatar 2022 organising committee responded to various allegations by claiming that hosting the World Cup in Qatar would act as a "catalyst for change" in the region. According to a February 2021 article in The Guardian, some 6,500 migrant construction workers had died. However, the World Cup in Qatar was the most expensive in the competition's history and had many modern technologies, with many expressing their satisfaction with the country's handling of the tournament.

Qatar was estimated to host a football fanbase of 1.6 million for the 2022 FIFA World Cup. However, the construction work in country was expected to only take the available 37,000 hotel rooms to 70,000 by the end of 2021. In December 2019, the Qatari World Cup officials approached the organisers of the Glastonbury Festival in England and the Coachella Festival in the United States, to plan huge desert campsites for thousands of football fans. The World Cup campsites on the outskirts were reported to have licensed bars, restaurants, entertainment and washing facilities. Moreover, two cruise ships were also reserved as temporary floating accommodations for nearly 40,000 people during the tournament.

[[Khalifa International Stadium

Though football is the most popular sport, other team sports have experienced considerable success at senior level. In 2015, the national handball team emerged as runners-up to France in the World Men's Handball Championship as hosts, however the tournament was marred by numerous controversies regarding the host nation and its team. Further, in 2014, Qatar won the world championship in men's 3x3 basketball.

Cricket is popular amongst the South Asian diaspora in Qatar. Casual street cricket is the most popular format of the game, but the Qatar Cricket Association has been a member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) since 1999 and the men's and women's national teams both play regularly in ICC competitions. The primary cricket ground in Qatar is the West End Park International Cricket Stadium.

Basketball is a developed sport amongst Asian people in Qatar. Qatar hosted the 2005 FIBA Asia Championship, 2013 FIBA Asia 3x3 Championship, 2014 FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship and 2022 FIBA Under-16 Asian Championship. Qatar will host the 2027 FIBA Basketball World Cup making this become the first Arab country to host the FIBA Basketball World Cup.

Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex in Doha hosted the WTA Tour Championships in women's tennis between 2008 and 2010. Doha holds the WTA Premier tournament Qatar Ladies Open annually. Since 2002, Qatar has hosted the annual Tour of Qatar, a cycling race in six stages. Every February, riders are racing on the roads across Qatar's flat land for six days. Each stage covers a distance of more than 100 km, though the time trial usually is a shorter distance. Tour of Qatar is organised by the Qatar Cycling Federation for professional riders in the category of Elite Men.

The Qatar Army Skydiving Team has several different skydiving disciplines placing among the top nations in the world. The Qatar National Parachute team performs annually during Qatar's National Day and at other large events, such as the 2015 World Handball Championship. Doha four times was the host of the official FIVB Volleyball Men's Club World Championship and three times host FIVB Volleyball Women's Club World Championship. Doha also hosted the Asian Volleyball Championship once.

Notes

References

References

  1. (19 August 2019). "Population of Qatar by nationality". Priya Dsouza.
  2. "The Constitution".
  3. "Population by Gender".
  4. "Total Population by Sex in Census (1986 , 1997 , 2004 , 2010 , 2020 )".
  5. "World Economic Outlook Database, April 2025".
  6. "GINI index". World Bank.
  7. (6 May 2025). "Human Development Report 2025". [[United Nations Development Programme]].
  8. "List of left- & right-driving countries – World Standards". WorldStandards.
  9. "Population By Religion, Gender And Municipality March 2020". Qatar Statistics Authority.
  10. Johnstone, T. M.. (January 2013). "Encyclopaedia of Islam". Brill Online.
  11. "Archived copy".
  12. {{Cite Lexico. Qatar
  13. {{Cite EPD. 18. Qatar
  14. {{cite LPD. 3
  15. (12 June 2014). "How do you say 'Qatar'? Senate hearing has the answer". Washington Post.
  16. "Qatar: Freedom in the World 2020 Country Report".
  17. Gambrell, Jon. (2024-11-05). "Qataris votes to end limited polls for legislative seats in shadow of US election".
  18. "Population of Qatar by nationality – 2017 report".
  19. "The Constitution".
  20. "GDP per capita, PPP (current international $) {{!}} Data".
  21. "GNI per capita, Atlas method (current US$) {{!}} Data".
  22. Nations, United. (8 September 2022). "Human Development Report 2021-22".
  23. (14 March 2013). "Indices & Data | Human Development Reports". United Nations Development Programme.
  24. (6 July 2022). "2022 World LNG Report Press Release". International Gas Union (IGU).
  25. (4 October 2019). "Where in the world do people emit the most CO2?".
  26. Cooper, Andrew F.. "Middle Powers: Squeezed out or Adaptive?". Public Diplomacy Magazine.
  27. Kamrava, Mehran. "Mediation and Qatari Foreign Policy".
  28. Dagher, Sam. (17 October 2011). "Tiny Kingdom's Huge Role in Libya Draws Concern". Online.wsj.com.
  29. "Qatar: Rise of an Underdog". Politicsandpolicy.org.
  30. Black. (26 October 2011). "Qatar admits sending hundreds of troops to support Libya rebels".
  31. (1992). "The heritage of Qatar". Immel Publishing.
  32. "History of Qatar". Qatar Statistics Authority.
  33. "Maps". Qatar National Library.
  34. Hazlitt, William. (1851). "The Classical Gazetteer: A Dictionary of Ancient Geography, Sacred and Profane". Whittaker & co..
  35. "About us". Katara.
  36. (2010). "The Emergence of Qatar: The Turbulent Years 1627–1916". Routledge.
  37. (1998). "موسوعة المعلومات القطرية – المجلد الجغرافي". College of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Qatar.
  38. Lyall, Sarah. (21 November 2022). "The 2022 World Cup is being hosted in Qatar, which, as everyone knows, is pronounced...". [[The New York Times]].
  39. Toth, Anthony. "Qatar: Historical Background." [https://cdn.loc.gov/master/frd/frdcstdy/pe/persiangulfstate00metz_0/persiangulfstate00metz_0_djvu.txt ''A Country Study: Qatar''] {{Webarchive. link. (9 February 2017 ([[Helen Chapin Metz]], editor). [[Library of Congress]] [[Federal Research Division]] (January 1993). ''This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the [[public domain]]''.)
  40. (1986). "Bahrain Through the Ages: The Archaeology". Routledge.
  41. "History of Qatar". Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Qatar. London: Stacey International, 2000.
  42. Rice, Michael. (1994). "Archaeology of the Persian Gulf". Routledge.
  43. "Sumerian Civilization".
  44. TIME. (18 April 1960). "Science: Home City of Sumer?".
  45. (1963). "Dilmun: Quest for Paradise". Antiquity.
  46. Magee, Peter. (2014). "The Archaeology of Prehistoric Arabia". Cambridge Press.
  47. Sterman, Baruch. (2012). "Rarest Blue: The Remarkable Story Of An Ancient Color Lost To History And Rediscovered". Lyons Press.
  48. Cadène, Philippe. (2013). "Atlas of the Gulf States". BRILL.
  49. "History of Qatar". Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Qatar. London: Stacey International, 2000.
  50. (1999). "Christians in Asia Before 1500". University of Michigan Press.
  51. Commins, David. (2012). "The Gulf States: A Modern History". I. B. Tauris.
  52. Habibur Rahman, p. 33
  53. (31 May 2011). "AUB academics awarded $850,000 grant for project on the Syriac writers of Qatar in the 7th century AD". American University of Beirut.
  54. (2014). "The Syriac Writers of Qatar in the Seventh Century". Gorgias Press LLC.
  55. "Bahrain". maritimeheritage.org.
  56. Fromherz, Allen. (13 April 2012). "Qatar: A Modern History". Georgetown University Press.
  57. Rahman, Habibur. (2006). "The Emergence Of Qatar". Routledge.
  58. (2001). "A political chronology of the Middle East". Routledge / Europa Publications.
  59. Page, Kogan. (2004). "Middle East Review 2003–04: The Economic and Business Report". Kogan Page Ltd.
  60. (2012). "Qatar, 2012 (The Report: Qatar)". Oxford Business Group.
  61. (1992). "The heritage of Qatar". Immel Publishing.
  62. Russell, Malcolm. (2014). "The Middle East and South Asia 2014". Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
  63. "History". qatarembassy.net.
  64. Larsen, Curtis. (1984). "Life and Land Use on the Bahrain Islands: The Geoarchaeology of an Ancient Society (Prehistoric Archeology and Ecology series)". University of Chicago Press.
  65. Althani, Mohamed. (2013). "Jassim the Leader: Founder of Qatar". Profile Books.
  66. Gillespie, Carol Ann. (2002). "Bahrain (Modern World Nations)". Chelsea House Publications.
  67. "Tarot Island • MyTrip Saudi Tour Operator – رحلتي السياحية".
  68. Anscombe, Frederick. (1997). "The Ottoman Gulf: The Creation of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar". Columbia University Press.
  69. (2016). "Ruwayda: an historic urban settlement in north Qatar". Post-Medieval Archaeology.
  70. "Qatar Timeline". Planning and Statistics Authority (Qatar).
  71. Potter, Lawrence. (2010). "The Persian Gulf in History". Palgrave Macmillan.
  72. Heard-Bey, Frauke. (2008). "From Tribe to State. The Transformation of Political Structure in Five States of the GCC". EDUCatt – Ente per il diritto allo studio universitario dell'Università Cattolica.
  73. 'Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf. Vol I. Historical. Part IA & IB. J G Lorimer. 1915' [1000] (1155/1782), p. 1001
  74. Crystal, Jill. (1995). "Oil and Politics in the Gulf: Rulers and Merchants in Kuwait and Qatar". Cambridge University Press.
  75. Casey, Michael S.. (2007). "The History of Kuwait (The Greenwood Histories of the Modern Nations)". Greenwood.
  76. "'Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf. Vol I. Historical. Part IA & IB. J G Lorimer. 1915' [843] (998/1782)". qdl.qa.
  77. "Qatar". Teachmideast.org.
  78. (2004). "Katar'da Osmanlilar 1871–1916". Turk Tarih Kurumu.
  79. (2016). "The Creation of Qatar". Routledge.
  80. (1991). "Arabia's Frontiers: The Story of Britain's Boundary Drawing in the Desert". IB Tauris.
  81. (November 1999). "Review of The Ottoman Gulf: The Creation of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Qatar by Frederick F. Anscombe; The Blood-Red Arab Flag: An Investigation into Qasimi Piracy, 1797–1820 by Charles E. Davies; The Politics of Regional Trade in Iraq, Arabia and the Gulf, 1745–1900 by Hala Fattah". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies.
  82. (2021). "Khannour Battle 1889, Causes, Results, and Reactions in the Arabian Gulf: Documentary Research". Association of Arab Universities Journal for Arts.
  83. Habibur Rahman, pgs.143–144
  84. Habibur Rahman, pgs.150–151
  85. Habibur Rahman, p. 152
  86. (2 June 2007). "Battle of Al Wajbah". Qatar Visitor.
  87. "Amiri Diwan – Shaikh Abdullah Bin Jassim Al Thani". Diwan.gov.qa.
  88. (1979). "The Creation of Qatar". Croom Helm.
  89. (2005). "The Emergence of Qatar: The Turbulent Years 1627–1916". Routledge.
  90. (1979). "The Creation of Qatar". Croom Helm.
  91. (2017). "Empires and Anarchies: A History of Oil in the Middle East". Reaktion Books.
  92. Wilton, John, unpublished memoir, ‘Qatar and Sharjah, 1949–1952’, Special Collections, University of Exeter Library, Exeter.
  93. (29 October 2013). "Historian Heard-Bey On Why the UAE is a Federation". NYU Abu Dhabi.
  94. A Treaty of Friendship and an Exchange of Notes, each entered into on 3 September 1971
  95. Exchange of Notes constituting an Agreement between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and Kuwait regarding relations between the United ... Exchange of Notes concerning the Termination of Special Treaty Relations ... Northern Ireland and the State of Qatar, 3 September 1971
  96. [http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/l-enquete-de-l-obs/20130405.OBS6953/qatar-s-ils-pouvaient-ils-acheteraient-la-tour-eiffel.html nouvelobs.com: "Qatar : "S'ils pouvaient, ils achèteraient la Tour Eiffel"] {{Webarchive. link. (10 October 2017 , 7 April 2013)
  97. (26 June 2013). "New Qatari emir Sheikh Tamim 'set to announce reshuffle'". BBC News.
  98. "Qatar opens first church, quietly".
  99. (23 July 2019). "Qatar sees robust economic growth".
  100. (March 2011). "Qatar National Development Strategy 2011–2016". [[General Secretariat for Development Planning.
  101. (5 August 2008). "Real estate in Qatar – A growth story: The economic background".
  102. "Oil and Gas Sector".
  103. (15 January 2013). "Qatar's delicate balancing act". BBC News.
  104. "Qatar (01/10)". State.gov.
  105. Recknagel, Charles. (9 April 2008). "Iraq: Hussein Unlikely To Welcome Asylum Offers As Solution To Crisis". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
  106. "Last respects paid to teacher killed by bomb". Dorset Echo.
  107. Coman, Julian. (21 March 2005). "Egyptian Suicide Bomber Blamed for Attack in Qatar". The Independent.
  108. Analytica, Oxford. (25 March 2005). "The Advent of Terrorism in Qatar". Forbes.
  109. Petrović, Nikola. (3 September 2021). "Relations in the MENA region: Saudi Arabia and Qatar – CeGIT : Analysis".
  110. (14 June 2012). "Qatar Timeline". BBC News.
  111. (16 May 2013). "Qatar bankrolls Syrian revolt with cash and arms". Financial Times.
  112. (27 March 2015). "Saudi-led coalition strikes rebels in Yemen, inflaming tensions in region". [[CNN]].
  113. (5 June 2017). "Six nations cut diplomatic ties to Qatar as Arab rift deepens". Hurriyet Daily News.
  114. (5 June 2017). "Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt and Bahrain break diplomatic ties with Qatar over 'terrorism'". The Guardian.
  115. (August 2021). "Qatar appoints first ambassador to Saudi Arabia Since Rift". Al Jazeera.
  116. Reilly, Damian. (9 December 2010). "Doha to overtake Dubai?". Arabian Business.
  117. Nordland, Rod. (24 June 2013). "In Surprise, Emir of Qatar Plans to Abdicate, Handing Power to Son". The New York Times.
  118. (20 June 2014). "The World factbook". CIA.Gov.
  119. Rhys, Paul. "Blatter reaches out to Arabia". Aljazeera.
  120. (8 February 2012). "Qatar". [[Central Intelligence Agency]].
  121. Anthony, John Duke, Crystal, Jill Ann, Zeidan, Adam. "Qatar". ''Encyclopedia Britannica'', 31 March 2025, https://www.britannica.com/place/Qatar. Accessed 2 April 2025
  122. "Qatar's climate {{!}} Weather & climate guide".
  123. "Qatar climate: average weather, temperature, rain – Climates to Travel".
  124. "General Information".
  125. "List of Parties". Convention on Biological Diversity.
  126. "National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan. State of Qatar". Convention on Biological Diversity.
  127. A. H. Moubasher. (1993). "Soil Fungi in Qatar and Other Arab Countries". Centre for Scientific and Applied Research, University of Qatar.
  128. Aurora M Castilla. (5 June 2014). "The Lizards Living in Qatar". Green Solutions.
  129. "Nations Are Undercounting Emissions, Putting UN Goals at Risk".
  130. "GHG Profiles – Non-Annex I".
  131. (26 September 2019). "Fossil CO2 and GHG emissions of all world countries : 2019 report.". Publications Office of the European Union.
  132. "Doha Sea Temperature".
  133. BBC News, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3784765.stm ''How democratic is the Middle East?''] {{Webarchive. link. (11 February 2021 , 9 September 2005.)
  134. United States Department of State [https://2009-2017.state.gov/documents/organization/186656.pdf Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2011: Qatar] {{Webarchive. link. (26 October 2020 , 2011.)
  135. Gardener, David. "Qatar shows how to manage a modern monarchy". [[Financial Times]].
  136. "Embassy of Canada to the State of Qatar". [[Government of Canada]].
  137. "BBC NEWS – Middle East – How democratic is the Middle East?".
  138. "Documents".
  139. (25 June 2013). "Qatari emir Sheikh Hamad hands power to son Tamim". BBC.
  140. "Council of Ministers". Embassy of the State of Qatar in Washington DC.
  141. Lambert, Jennifer. (2011). "Political Reform in Qatar: Participation, Legitimacy and Security". Middle East Policy.
  142. (1 November 2011). "Qatar to hold advisory council elections in 2013". Reuters.
  143. "The objections to Qatar hosting the World Cup reek of Eurocentrism".
  144. "Political Stability: the Mysterious Case of Qatar".
  145. (14 October 2021). "Qatar's first elected parliament may have more power than other Persian Gulf legislatures. Here's why.". [[The Washington Post]].
  146. "Qatari elections: A PR stunt or a step toward democracy? {{!}} DW {{!}} 24 August 2021".
  147. (17 June 2016). "Legislative elections in Qatar postponed until at least 2019". Doha News.
  148. V-Dem Institute, University of Gothenburg. (2025). "Democracy Report 2025".
  149. "The People Want Reform… In Qatar, Too.". Jadaliyya.
  150. "Qatar {{!}} The Global State of Democracy".
  151. "Global State of Democracy Indices {{!}} The Global State of Democracy".
  152. "Home {{!}} The Global State of Democracy".
  153. "The Permanent Constitution of the State of Qatar". Government of Qatar.
  154. "Constitution of Qatar".
  155. (27 September 2021). "The World Factbook". U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
  156. "Qatar". [[US Department of State]].
  157. "Qatar Gender Equality Profile". UNICEF.
  158. "Qatar". Amnesty International.
  159. (30 June 2006). "Filipino woman gets 100 lashes for giving birth in Qatar".
  160. (28 September 2013). "Special report: The punishment was death by stoning. The crime? Having".
  161. Jenifer Fenton. "Religious law, prison for "blasphemy", severe sexual inequalilty: Qatar's human rights review".
  162. (20 May 2014). "United Explanations – What are the worst countries in the world to be gay?".
  163. Davies Krish. (9 April 2019). "General Laws and Regulations in Qatar". OnlineQatar.
  164. Alex Delmar-Morgan. (7 January 2012). "Qatar, Unveiling Tensions, Suspends Sale of Alcohol". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  165. Jenifer Fenton. (16 January 2012). "Qatar's Impromptu Alcohol Ban". The Arabist.
  166. "Qatar Distribution Company". Qatar Loving.
  167. (2 June 2007). "Purchasing Alcohol in Qatar". Qatar Visitor.
  168. Walid, Tamara. (11 November 2009). "Qatar would 'welcome' Israel in 2022". [[The National (Abu Dhabi).
  169. "What To Know About Drinking Alcohol at the Qatar World Cup".
  170. Aningtias Jatmika. (29 May 2014). "Qatar Bans Tourists from Wearing Leggings in Public".
  171. "Qatar Municipalities". Qatar Ministry of Municipality and Environment.
  172. (April 2015). "2015 Population census". Ministry of Development Planning and Statistics.
  173. "Population By Gender, Municipality And Zone, March 2004". General Secretariat for Development Planning.
  174. (6 October 2014). "Qatar Is a U.S. Ally. They Also Knowingly Abet Terrorism. What's Going On?".
  175. (14 April 2021). "Qatar's Regional Relations and Foreign Policy After Al Ula". The Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.
  176. (7 June 2017). "Terrorist Attacks Pour Gas on Saudi- Iranian Rivalry and Gulf Tensions". Eurasia Diary.
  177. (16 July 2017). "Qatar Opens Its Doors to All, to the Dismay of Some". The New York Times.
  178. (31 January 2022). "Biden Designates Qatar as a Major Non-NATO Ally". The New York Times.
  179. (19 November 2022). "Qatar and France: 50 years of advantageous friendship". Le Monde.fr.
  180. (11 July 2018). "Qatar, China enjoy strong ties based on respect". Gulf-Times.
  181. (25 February 2010). "Qatar and Saudi Arabia sign defense agreement". Tehrantimes.com.
  182. (21 January 2021). "How Qatar and Turkey came together". The Economist.
  183. (30 June 2013). "Taking Outsize Role in Syria, Qatar Funnels Arms to Rebels". New York Times.
  184. Jay Solomon. (10 October 2014). "U.S.-Qatar Alliance Strains Coalition Against Islamic State". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  185. (8 May 2025). "Qatar's funding of Syrian salaries: A strategic move in regional politics – analysis".
  186. "Building Bridges: Qatar's Strategic Investments in Iraq".
  187. "Qatar deal expected to boost Palestinian trade – AL-Monitor: The Middle Eastʼs leading independent news source since 2012".
  188. "Libyan Civil War: Qatar Involvement".
  189. (26 March 2015). "Houthis reject Doha peace talks – Yemen {{!}} ReliefWeb".
  190. Cafiero, Giorgio. (21 December 2024). "Qatar's position in post-Assad Syria : Peoples Dispatch". Peoples Dispatch.
  191. (12 December 2022). "EU corruption scandal puts democracy under attack – European Parliament head". BBC News.
  192. Barakat, Sultan. (July 2012). "The Qatari Spring: Qatar's emerging role in peacemaking".
  193. (22 May 2008). "Qatar pulls off mediation coup in Lebanon crisis". Reuters.
  194. Myre, Greg. (10 October 2006). "Qatar Emerges as a Mediator Between Fatah and Hamas". The New York Times.
  195. Reeves, Eric. (9 February 2009). "The Qatar "Peace Process": Less Than Meets the Eye". Sudan Tribune.
  196. (4 October 2017). "Why closing the Taliban's Qatar office would be an error". [[Financial Times]].
  197. Kalin, Stephen. (25 November 2023). "Gaza Diplomacy Cements Qatar's Global Mediator Role". The Wall Street Journal.
  198. Carla Mascarenhas. (26 May 2023). "'Terrified, humiliated': Invasive strip search lawsuit against Qatar Airlines gains momentum". [[news.com.au]].
  199. (26 October 2020). "Qatar airport incident in which women were invasively searched reported to Australian Federal Police". [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]].
  200. (18 September 2023). "Five Americans head home in $6bn US-Iran prisoner swap deal".
  201. (3 October 2023). "Biden thanks Qatar's emir for mediation in freeing Americans from Iran".
  202. missionqa. (24 September 2024). "Designation of Qatar into the Visa Waiver Program".
  203. (24 September 2024). "US admits Qatar into visa waiver program". [[Reuters]].
  204. IISS. (2023). "The Military Balance 2023". International Institute for Strategic Studies.
  205. "The SIPRI Military Expenditure Database". Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
  206. Gatopolous, Alex. (5 January 2021). "How the Gulf crisis spurred Qatar to expand its military". Al Jazeera.
  207. Ardemagni, Eleonora. (25 April 2018). "Building New Gulf States Through Conscription". [[Carnegie Endowment for International Peace]].
  208. Barany, Zoltan. (5 June 2023). "National Service in the Gulf: Unsurprising Disparities". Italian Institute for International Political Studies.
  209. "Trends in International Arms Transfer, 2014". Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
  210. "TIV of arms imports to the top 50 largest importers, 2016-2016". SIPRI.
  211. "Background Notes: Qatar, November 1997". U.S. State Department.
  212. Roberts, David. (28 September 2011). "Behind Qatar's Intervention In Libya". [[Foreign Affairs]].
  213. (7 September 2015). "Qatar deploys 1,000 ground troops to fight in Yemen". Al Jazeera.
  214. (25 March 2016). "Gulf Coalition Operations in Yemen (Part 1): The Ground War". [[The Washington Institute for Near East Policy]].
  215. (26 November 2017). "Qatar-Gulf crisis: How it all got started on June 5". Al Jazeera.
  216. Rohde, Ruth. (2024). "Raytheon's Dirty Business in Qatar (Sham Contracts)".
  217. "Arms trade corruption – what do we know?".
  218. (16 October 2024). "Defense contractor to pay $252M penalty to resolve Qatar bribery charges".
  219. "Qatar".
  220. (13 January 2022). "Qatar".
  221. (1 May 2012). "Qatar to allow trade union, scrap 'sponsor' system". Al Arabiya News.
  222. Gibson, Owen. (14 May 2014). "Qatar government admits almost 1,000 fatalities among migrants". The Guardian.
  223. (2009). "The UN Committee against Torture: Human Rights Monitoring and the Legal Recognition of Cruelty". Human Rights Quarterly.
  224. (25 July 2006). "Conclusions and Recommendations: Qatar". UN Committee Against Torture.
  225. (17 May 2016). "LGBT relationships are illegal in 74 countries, research finds". The Independent.
  226. (1 December 2021). "Analysis {{!}} Here are the 10 countries where homosexuality may be punished by death". [[The Washington Post]].
  227. (June 2011). "Human Trafficking Report 2011". Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, [[United States Department of State]].
  228. (18 January 2013). "International unions warn Qatar's work visa system allows employers to use forced labour". ITUC-CSI-IGB.
  229. Wilson, Nigel. (21 July 2014). "Qatar Announces New Labour Law Reforms Amid Workers' Rights Outcry". International Business Times.
  230. Walker, Lesley. (15 January 2015). "Firms in Qatar who fail to pay workers on time could face suspensions". Doha News.
  231. Peter Kovessy. (27 October 2015). "Qatar's Emir signs into law kafala changes (updated)". Doha News.
  232. (8 November 2015). "Qatar: New reforms Won't Protect Migrant Workers". Human Rights Watch.
  233. Chris Arsenault. (28 October 2015). "Qatar complicit in 'modern slavery' despite reforms – unions". Reuters.
  234. (19 March 2021). "Qatar's new minimum wage enters into force".
  235. Miles, Hugh. (2005). "Al-Jazeera". The New York Times.
  236. (30 January 2024). "2023 Corruption Perceptions Index: Explore the results".
  237. "Qatar faces international scrutiny over human rights violations".
  238. "Human rights in Qatar".
  239. Human Rights Watch. (16 January 2025). "Qatar: Events of 2024". Share this via Facebook.
  240. "About Doha {{!}} 5th United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5)".
  241. Rasoul Sorkhabi. (2010). "The Qatar Oil Discoveries".
  242. Nordland, Rod. (25 June 2013). "New Hope for Democracy in a Dynastic Land". NYTimes.com.
  243. Trade and industry is overseen by the [[Ministry of Business and Trade (Qatar). Ministry of Business and Trade]].. link
  244. (October 2016). "Report for Selected Countries and Subjects (PPP valuation of country GDP)". IMF.
  245. Bill Crane (20 April 2015). [https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/04/gulf-states-slave-labor-migrant-workers/ Gravediggers of the Gulf] {{Webarchive. link. (10 October 2017 . ''[[Jacobin (magazine)). Jacobin]]''. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
  246. (12 June 2012). "Qatar: Migrant Construction Workers Face Abuse". Human Rights Watch.
  247. "Qatar tourist guide".
  248. "The Strange Power of Qatar by Hugh Eakin".
  249. "Doing Business in Qatar: 2012 Country Commercial Guide for U.S. Companies". US & Foreign Commercial Service And US Department of State.
  250. "OPEC Member Countries". Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
  251. Kortekaas, Vanessa. (28 October 2013). "New Qatar emir shakes up sovereign wealth fund". Financial Times.
  252. "The World's Richest Countries". Forbes.
  253. (6 November 2013). "Qatar Holding LLC Among Investors in BlackBerrys $1 Billion Convertible Debt". Berryreview.com.
  254. Hall, Camilla. (30 October 2013). "Qatar fund quietly builds $1bn Bank of America stake". Financial Times.
  255. Hall, Camilla. (4 July 2013). "Qatar: what's next for the world's most aggressive deal hunter?". Financial Times.
  256. "Information About Education, Economy, Health, IT and Tourism in Qatar". Portal.www.gov.qa.
  257. (16 February 2017). "Taxes on junk food, luxury items to be rolled out in Qatar soon".
  258. "layoffs Archives – Doha News".
  259. "Doha | City, Qatar, Map, & History | Britannica".
  260. "Qatar Oil Reserves, Production and Consumption Statistics".
  261. "Qatar – Industry".
  262. Simon Lincoln Reader. (12 November 2013). "Qatar shows how money can solve most problems". Bdlive.co.za.
  263. "Qatar National Vision 2030". Ministry of Development Planning and Statistics.
  264. (21 April 2017). "Qatar gets serious about solar". Oxford Business Group.
  265. (10 November 2016). "Qatar's Solar Energy Ambitions". Marhaba.
  266. (2019). "Tourism in the MENA Region". World Tourism Organization.
  267. (7 September 2022). "Qatar Travel and Tourism".
  268. (3 November 2020). "Tourism in Qatar". World Tourism Forum Institute.
  269. (23 November 2022). "Qatar's $220 billion tourism boost, will it pay off?".
  270. "Visit Qatar – Official Website".
  271. "Tourism".
  272. (4 October 2022). "Visiting Qatar during the FIFA World Cup? Here are eleven wonderful things to see".
  273. "#FutureQatar: A hub for connectivity in a globalised world".
  274. "About Qatar Airways".
  275. (9 October 2019). "Qatar Airways Business Class Review: Food, Seats, Fare and More".
  276. (9 March 2025). "Qatar Airways' breakneck growth will slow after next big plane order, says CEO". Financial Times.
  277. "CG of Qatar in Guangzhou: Belt and Road Initiative will change the world {{!}} GDToday".
  278. "Background of the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road – Xinhua Silk Road".
  279. (24 March 2025). "Diversification nations: The Gulf way to engage with Africa".
  280. (5 November 2019). "Milaha showcases its digital transformation at Qatar Silk Road Exhibition".
  281. Chaziza, Mordechai. (14 February 2020). "China–Qatar Strategic Partnership and the Realization of One Belt, One Road Initiative". China Report.
  282. "KUNA : Qatar, Kuwait critical partners in China's Silk Road Initiative – Communications – 03/11/2019".
  283. (5 September 2017). "Qatar's emir officially inaugurates Hamad Port". Al Jazeera.
  284. John Davison. (15 June 2017). "Gulf crisis a "blessing in disguise" for Qatar seaport". Reuters.
  285. (2016). "Qatar strengthens port facilities, capacity and transport links". Oxford Business Group.
  286. "QatarRail".
  287. Gulf Labour Markets and Migration (5 June 2025). [https://gulfmigration.grc.net/qatar-population-by-nationality-qatari-non-qatari-at-dates-of-censuses-1970-2020/ "Qatar: Population by nationality (Qatari/ non-Qatari) at dates of censuses (1970-2020)"]. ''gulfmigration.grc.net''. Retrieved 5 November 2025.
  288. "History of Census in Qatar". Qatar Statistics Authority.
  289. National Planning Council, State of Qatar. "Qatar Census 2020 Detailed Results".
  290. (1998). "Encyclopedia of Bilingualism and Bilingual Education". Multilingual Matters.
  291. Guttenplan, D. D.. (11 June 2012). "Battling to Preserve Arabic From English's Onslaught". The New York Times.
  292. "Listening instruction and patient safety: Exploring medical English as a lingua franca (MELF) for nursing education".
  293. "Qatar Facts". First Qatar Orthodontic Conference.
  294. "Report on International Religious Freedom – Qatar". US Department of State.
  295. "Qatar".
  296. (30 April 2011). "Tiny Qatar's growing global clout". BBC.
  297. (27 September 2012). "Qatar's modern future rubs up against conservative traditions". Reuters.
  298. (12 February 2013). "Rising power Qatar stirs unease among some Mideast neighbors". Reuters.
  299. "2011 Report on International Religious Freedom – Qatar". US Department of State.
  300. Hackett, Conrad; Stonawski, Marcin; Tong, Yunping; Kramer, Stephanie; Fengyan Shi, Anne; Zanetti, Nick (9 June 2025). [https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/feature/religious-composition-by-country-2010-2020/ "Religious Composition by Country, 2010-2020"]. ''Pew Research Center''. Retrieved 5 November 2025.
  301. Dr.Adnan. (6 October 2016). "Qatar has edge in European hotel acquisitions".
  302. (11 November 2022). "Islam in Qatar explained ahead of 2022 World Cup".
  303. (25 November 2019). "The Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs". Afreno.
  304. (24 February 2008). "Christians to Welcome Qatar's First Christian Church". Christianpost.com.
  305. (29 June 2006). "CIA The World Fact Book". State.gov.
  306. "Report on Qatar". Cumorah Project.
  307. "The Anglican Centre in Qatar". Epiphany-qatar.org.
  308. (2001). "World Christian encyclopedia: a comparative survey of churches and religions in the modern world". Oxford University Press.
  309. (9 November 2022). "Qatar's claims of diversity are undermined by its treatment of Bahá'ís". The Guardian.
  310. Anderson, Nick. (6 December 2015). "The Education City contracts: A case study from VCU in Qatar". Washington Post.
  311. (8 January 2013). "In the occasion of Literacy Arab Day, Qatar has the Lowest Illiteracy Rates in 2012". Qatar Statistics Authority.
  312. "Qatar constitution".
  313. "Our history". Qatar University.
  314. Hendengren, Adam. (25 June 2013). "SPECIAL REPORT: UNIVERSITY STUDIES IN THE MIDDLE EAST". Your Middle East.
  315. "World Data on Education – Qatar". UNESCO.
  316. (1 November 2010). "National student research fairs as evidence for progress in Qatar's Education for a New Era". Improving Schools.
  317. "Education for a New Era". Supreme Education Council.
  318. "Qatar". Ranking Web of Universities.
  319. "NHL Stenden University Qatar".
  320. (2014). "PISA 2012 Results in Focus". OECD.
  321. "Key findings – Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development". Oecd.org.
  322. "GII Innovation Ecosystems & Data Explorer 2025".
  323. (2025). "Global Innovation Index 2025: Innovation at a Crossroads". [[World Intellectual Property Organization]].
  324. "Global Innovation Index 2019".
  325. (28 October 2013). "Global Innovation Index".
  326. (March 2011). "Qatar National Development Strategy 2011~2016". Gulf Publishing and Printing Company.
  327. (6 March 2014). "Welcome to Al-Bairaq World". Qu.edu.qa.
  328. (26 January 2021). "QF partner Texas A&M at Qatar receives 11 QNRF grants for research to benefit Qatar". Texas A&M University at Qatar.
  329. (2017). "Transitioning Towards a Knowledge Society". Springer International Publishing.
  330. Vineetha Menon. (23 February 2009). "Qatar Foundation pumps $800 million into R&D hub". Arabian Business.
  331. Lesley Walker. (14 July 2015). "Qatari-Spanish JV win QR1.6bn contract to build new economic zone". Doha News.
  332. (21 October 2013). "QATAR: Compulsory health insurance leaves window for treatment abroad". International Medical Travel Journal.
  333. (13 July 2015). "Qatar's 2015 healthcare expenditure worth $5.2bn". Arabian Business.
  334. Shane McGinley. (30 July 2012). "Qatar is MidEast's biggest healthcare spender". Arabian Business.
  335. "Home".
  336. Newspaper, The Peninsula. (26 August 2022). "HMC marks 16 years of accreditation in a row by JCI".
  337. Shane McGinley. (30 July 2012). "Qatar is MidEast's biggest healthcare spender". Arabian Business.
  338. "Health report". World Health Organization.
  339. "Life expectancy in the Middle East". World Life Expectancy.
  340. "Mortality rate, infant (per 1,000 live births)". The World Bank.
  341. "Healthcare in Qatar". Allianz.
  342. (25 April 2014). "Report: Qatar's healthcare sector the fastest growing in the region". Doha News.
  343. Kamrava, Mehran. (2013). "Qatar: Small State, Big Politics". Cornell University Press.
  344. (29 November 2011). "Qatar National Day 2011". Time Out Doha.
  345. (10 December 2012). "Everything you need to know about Qatar National Day 2012". Doha News.
  346. (22 June 2015). "State of Qatar".
  347. (10 September 2017). "Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani".
  348. "H.E. Sheikha Al Mayassa Bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani – Chairperson, Qatar Museums".
  349. (1 January 2011). "Art in Qatar: A Smithsonian in the sand". The Economist.
  350. "QMA Board of Trustees". Qatar Museums Authority.
  351. "Qatar revealed as the world's biggest contemporary art buyer". The Art Newspaper.
  352. Bohas, Alexander. "The Political Trump-Cards of Cultural Potency Qatar's Policy of 'Cultural Grandeur'". Chaos International.
  353. link. Al Jasra Cultural and Social Club. Hassan Tawfiq. (1 May 2015)
  354. Muḥammad Muṣṭafá Badawī. (1992). "Modern Arabic Literature". Cambridge University Press.
  355. (6 June 2013). "News Media in the Arab World: A Study of 10 Arab and Muslim Countries". A&C Black.
  356. Blanchard, Christopher. (2014). "Qatar: Background and U.S. Relations". Congressional Research Service.
  357. Roth, Richard J.. (8 May 2013). "Awaiting a Modern Press Law in Qatar". [[The New York Times]].
  358. "Qatar Freedom of the Press". Freedom House.
  359. (27 September 2014). "New cybercrime law could have serious consequences for press freedom in Qatar". cpj.org.
  360. (17 September 2014). "Qatar: New Cyber Crime Law poses real threat to Freedom of Expression". gc4hr.org.
  361. (2010). "The Report: Qatar 2010". Oxford Business Group.
  362. Newspaper, The Peninsula. (15 December 2014). "Qatar has 122 publications in 8 languages".
  363. "South Asian Newspapers (Open Access)".
  364. "NRI Overall Ranking 2014". World Economic Forum.
  365. "Heritage and Culture". Qatar e-Gov.
  366. "Arts and Culture". Embassy of Qatar in London.
  367. "Qatar – a Sporting Nation". Qatar e-Government.
  368. (4 January 2011). "Fox Sports brings you everything you need to know – and a few things you don't – about the Asian Cup". Fox Sports.
  369. (1 February 2019). "Qatar stun Japan with 3–1 win to be crowned Asian Cup champions". The Guardian.
  370. (10 February 2024). "Afif stars as Qatar defeat Jordan to retain title". Asian Football Confederation.
  371. Paul Radford. (2 December 2010). "Russia, Qatar win 2018 and 2022 World Cups". Reuters.
  372. [https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/59868204 "World Cup 2022: A guide to the eight World Cup stadiums in Qatar"] (1 April 2022). ''[[BBC]]''. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  373. (6 July 2018). "Stadiums".
  374. (12 August 2013). "Europe's Top Leagues protest against 2022 winter World Cup in Qatar". Qatar Chronicle.
  375. (20 July 2013). "Fifa wants Qatar 2022 postponed to Winter". Qatar Chronicle.
  376. "BBC Sport – Qatar World Cup: '£3m payments to officials' corruption claim". BBC Sport.
  377. Ronay, Barney. (8 October 2022). "Blatter to Beckham: who was in the room when Qatar got the World Cup". The Guardian.
  378. (13 November 2014). "World Cup inquiry clears Qatar but criticises English FA". BBC.
  379. Ronay, Barney. (8 October 2022). "Football corruption and the remarkable road to Qatar's World Cup". The Guardian.
  380. Pattisson, Pete. (25 September 2013). "Revealed: Qatar's World Cup 'slaves'". The Guardian.
  381. (28 July 2014). "Qatar World Cup: migrants wait a year to be paid for building offices". [[The Guardian]].
  382. Owen Gibson and Pete Pattisson (23 December 2014). [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/23/qatar-nepal-workers-world-cup-2022-death-toll-doha Death toll among Qatar's 2022 World Cup workers revealed]. ''The Guardian.'' Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  383. Gibson, Owen. (14 June 2014). "Qatar hits back at allegations of bribery over 2022 World Cup". The Guardian.
  384. Pattisson, Pete. (23 February 2021). "Revealed: 6,500 migrant workers have died in Qatar since World Cup awarded". The Guardian.
  385. "World Cup 2022: Qatar tournament to feature semi-automated offside technology with ball sensors and cameras".
  386. "Football fans to sleep in Glastonbury-like tented villages at Qatar World Cup".
  387. "Match report". International Handball Federation.
  388. "2014 FIBA 3x3 World Championships". International Basketball Federation.
  389. (5 August 2022). "'Adrenaline rush': How street cricket has evolved in Qatar". Al Jazeera.
  390. (28 April 2023). "Qatar announced as host of the FIBA Basketball World Cup 2027". FIBA.
  391. (1 December 1994). "The homepage of Tour of Qatar". Letour.fr.
  392. Gay, Chris. "Skydive Mag – Incredible Demo at Doha".
  393. "QVA – Qatar Volleyball Association".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Qatar — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report