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‘Flagrant violation’: Israeli attack in Doha sparks regional condemnation 

An Israeli attack in Qatar’s capital, Doha, targeting Hamas officials has drawn swift condemnation from across the region and beyond with the UN chief calling the air strikes a “flagrant violation” of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Qatar.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office confirmed that the Israeli military carried out the attack in Doha on Tuesday against Hamas leaders. It was the first such attack by Israel on Qatar, which has been a key mediator in ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas and hosts the region’s largest United States military base, Al Udeid Air Base.

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The Qatari Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned “in the strongest terms the cowardly Israeli attack”.

Here are reactions from regional and international leaders:

UN secretary-general

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called the air raids a “flagrant violation” of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Qatar.

He added that all parties to the Gaza war must work towards achieving a permanent ceasefire rather than destroying the prospects of one.

Saudi Arabia

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Saudi Arabia “condemns and denounces in the strongest terms the brutal Israeli aggression and the flagrant violation of the sovereignty of the sisterly State of Qatar”, adding that it affirms “its full solidarity”.

It warned of the “grave consequences resulting from the Israeli occupation’s persistence in its criminal transgressions and its blatant violation of the principles of international law and all international norms”.

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Turkiye

Turkiye’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned Israel’s attack on Qatar, saying it shows Israel is not interested in an agreement to end the war on Gaza.

“The targeting of the Hamas negotiating delegation while ceasefire talks continue shows that Israel does not aim to reach peace, but rather continue the war,” the ministry said in a statement.

“This situation is clear proof that Israel has adopted its expansionist politics in the region and terrorism as a state policy.”

The United Arab Emirates

The United Arab Emirates also voiced support for Doha, condemning the “treacherous Israeli attack”.

Anwar Gargash, diplomatic adviser to the UAE’s president, said: “The security of the Arab Gulf states is indivisible, and we stand heart and soul with the sisterly State of Qatar, condemning the treacherous Israeli attack that targeted it, and affirming our full solidarity with it in confronting this aggression.”

Kuwait

Kuwait issued a statement through its Ministry of Foreign Affairs strongly condemning what it described as “the brutal aggression against the State of Qatar by the unjust Israeli forces”.

Jordan

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates condemned the Israeli bombing as a flagrant violation of international law and the UN Charter and called it a blatant attack on the sovereignty and security of Qatar.

Ministry spokesman Fuad Majali said the Israeli attack constitutes a violation of the sovereignty of an Arab state and is a dangerous and unacceptable provocative escalation that pushes the region towards further violence and conflict and threatens regional and international security and stability.

Iran

Iran described the attack as a “gross violation”, and Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said the “extremely dangerous and criminal action is a gross violation of all international rules and regulations, a violation of Qatar’s national sovereignty and territorial integrity”.

Iraq

Iraq’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also criticised the attack, calling it a “cowardly act” and expressing “full support” for Qatar to confront any aggression.

Palestinian response

Hussein al-Sheikh, vice president of the State of Palestine and vice chairman of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Oraganization, said: “We strongly condemn the heinous Israeli attack targeting the sisterly State of Qatar.”

The director general of the Government Media Office in Gaza, Ismail al-Thawabta, said: “The ‘Israeli’ occupation committed a cowardly assassination crime in the heart of the Qatari capital, Doha, the mediating state in negotiations between the Palestinian resistance and the occupation.”

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The Palestinian Islamic Jihad armed group described the attack as a “blatant criminal act”.

Yemen’s Houthi group

Mahdi al-Mashat, head of the Houthi Supreme Political Council, said Arab and Muslim countries must “pay attention” to Israel’s plans before it’s too late.

“We warn against a formula for the violations of all countries in the region,” al-Mashat said. “What happened in Doha will happen again and more in the rest of the countries if we do not all unite in confronting the Zionist threat.”

Maldives

The Maldives also described the attack as “cowardly and a serious violation of international law”.

“The Maldives stands in solidarity with the State of Qatar and calls on the international community to take urgent and unified action to hold Israel accountable for its numerous and continued violations of international norms and principles,” President Mohamed Muizzu posted on X.

There has been no immediate comment from the US.

 

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Accusations Flare Over Oil-Spray Deposition

Scheduling the deposition of an oil refinery executive has proved slippery business, according to attorneys for Crucians claiming damages for homes sprayed with pollutants more than four years ago. Attorneys for the executive and the refinery’s current owner claim otherwise.

Oil refinery manager Fermin Rodriguez did not appear for a scheduled deposition Tuesday morning despite a federal judge’s order. After nearly a year of fruitless requests for Rodriguez to sit for legally-binding questions about the 2021 petroleum spray — following an attempted restart of the long-shuttered refinery — he has one more chance before possibly being found in contempt.

Rodriguez, a Port Hamilton Refining and Transportation employee, worked for former refinery owners, Limetree Bay, during the attempted restart.

Attorneys for the people with fouled cisterns told the court that, in January, Rodriguez’s attorney in Florida said the vice president and refinery manager was not available to speak until February, then May, then July — despite working a 15-minute drive from the proposed deposition site, the office of attorney Lee Rohn.

Matthew Ceradini, a North Carolina-based attorney representing Rodriguez as of Tuesday, said he thought the deposition date was Nov. 12. The Nov. 4 date was an attempt by Rohn to rush the process, he said.

“It depends on who you talk to,” Ceradini said. “The court has already issued an order saying that if he doesn’t show up today, then show up on the twelfth, which was the original plan.”

Magistrate Judge G. Alan Teague’s order, issued Monday, gave both dates, but was clear on what missing the next deposition date in Rohn’s office would mean.

“Failure to do so, may result in Rodriguez being held in contempt,” Teague ordered.

Ceradini would not confirm that Rodriguez would appear in Rohn’s office Nov. 12 but said the refinery manager was preparing for a deposition.

Christiansted attorney Andrew C. Simpson, who represents current refinery owner and Rodriguez’s current employer, Port Hamilton, told the Source he rejected any insinuation that Rodriguez had been avoiding the deposition. Although Port Hamilton did not exist as a company when the petroleum flare damaged homes, Simpson said he’d offered to assist Rodriguez with the deposition.

“ … I personally offered to facilitate the scheduling of Mr. Rodriguez’s deposition since he is Port Hamilton’s vice president of operations and refinery manager. I was told in no uncertain terms by the attorneys representing the plaintiffs that my assistance was not needed. I note that they did not inform the magistrate-judge of this offer. It appears that they seek chaos for some ulterior motive rather than the efficient scheduling of Mr. Rodriguez’s deposition,” Simpson said in a written statement. “Mr. Rodriguez has never refused to appear for his deposition and has always acted based upon the advice he has received from counsel.”

Simpson said Rodriguez had not been notified of a Nov. 4 deposition date. The order from Judge Teague was dated Nov. 3 and did allow for a secondary Nov. 12 deposition.

Simpson also said Rodriguez was not an actual Limetree Bay employee but a consultant with no decision-making responsibilities at the time of the oil spray.

Rodriguez had difficulty finding legal representation for the deposition because so many people allowed to practice law in the Virgin Islands had potential conflicts of interest with current or former refinery owners, plaintiffs, or associated parties, he said.

In early September, attorneys attempted to serve Rodriguez with a subpoena for a Sept. 18 deposition. This time, an assistant for Rodriguez’s attorney in Florida said the refinery manager was actually represented by Limetree Bay Refining attorneys. Limetree attorneys denied this in October, according to court records.

Rodriguez or his attorneys also asserted that he did not need to attend a deposition because he planned to invoke his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination.

Judge Teague denied this claim, writing that Rodriguez could only invoke such rights on a question-by-question basis. Rodriguez may also have to explain why he believed his answers could be self-incriminating.

Rodriguez did not respond to an emailed request for comment.

The refinery, formerly known as Limetree Bay, has faced significant environmental and regulatory challenges in recent years, including an Environmental Protection Agency-mandated shutdown in 2021 after pollution incidents impacted surrounding communities. Port Hamilton acquired the facility later that year for $62 million at a bankruptcy auction. Since then, the company has been under EPA oversight to address safety and environmental concerns.

In 2022, Rodriguez said new refinery owner Port Hamilton was preparing for a safe restart. In 2024, however, after the EPA removed ammonia and toxic liquids from potentially unsafe containers, Port Hamilton representatives said there were no immediate plans for a restart.

In August, a federal judge ordered Limetree to release findings about the pollution incident gathered by Sedgwick Claims Management Services. Sedgwick was to assess complaints from St. Croix residents claiming their property, including cisterns, had been fouled by toxins, according to court records. That report was hidden away while Sedgwick attempted to collect a $1.1 million outstanding invoice from Limetree. The more than four-year-long argument included disagreement about which Limetree-associated entity even hired Sedgwick, according to court records.

The documents were not immediately released.

The records release was one of many contentious recent episodes for the long-troubled refinery. Even questions about who exactly owned the refinery caused consternation.

After the oil spray, Limetree officials agreed to distribute water to people who relied on cisterns fouled by the pollutants. The company later decided to fight water distribution in court for more than a year.

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