‘STOP Liberating Us’: Qatari Minister Accuses Western Powers Of ‘Trafficking And Raping Little Kids’

Mar 9, 2026 - 09:28
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‘STOP Liberating Us’: Qatari Minister Accuses Western Powers Of ‘Trafficking And Raping Little Kids’

In a stunning display of gaslighting on International Women’s Day, Qatari Minister of Education Lolwah bint Rashid Al Khater took to social media on Sunday to deliver a sharp rebuke to the West.

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Her message? Stop trying to “liberate” Muslim women. While Al Khater framed her defiance as a stand against “sick destructive agendas” and “Hollywood-style” savior complexes, the reality on the ground in Doha tells a much darker story of state-sponsored subjugation.

Al Khater demanded that critics “leave us alone,” claiming on social media that the Islamic world is doing “just fine.” She went further, accusing Western powers of igniting wars for profit and “trafficking and raping little kids.” It is a classic authoritarian tactic: deflect from your own human rights record by hurling inflammatory, unsubstantiated accusations at the proponents of liberty.

But for the women living under Al Khater’s government, things have been anything but “fine.” While the Minister enjoys the privilege of high office, the average Qatari woman is legally treated as a permanent minor. According to a damning 94-page 2021 report from Human Rights Watch in 2021, Qatar’s “male guardianship” system masked a suffocating reality.

In the Qatari “paradise” Al Khater defends, a woman’s life was entirely tied to a man. Want to get married? You need the permission of a male guardian. Want to study abroad on a scholarship? Get a man’s signature. Want to work in a government job—perhaps even in Al Khater’s own Ministry of Education? You’ll likely need your father’s or husband’s consent.

The stories of those living under this “peaceful” planet that the Minister speaks of are harrowing. One 32-year-old woman, “Nawal,” recounted how her brother blocked her marriage simply because he “felt powerful” and wanted to show resistance. Another woman, “Dana,” was denied an urgent vaginal ultrasound for a suspected burst ovary because she couldn’t produce a marriage license. This isn’t “liberation”; it’s a medical and civil rights hostage situation.

Furthermore, the legal deck has been stacked. A husband could easily be granted a divorce, but a woman faced years of litigation. If she “disobeyed” by working without permission or refusing sex, she could lose her financial support. Men could marry four wives without any consent from their current spouse, yet a woman could not even be the primary guardian of her own children.

When Al Khater tells the West to “stop talking on our behalf,” she is really asking the world to stop looking at the bars of the cage. Qatar wants the prestige of the international stage—hosting World Cups and educational summits—without the accountability that comes with basic human dignity.

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