The Qatari scandal: between rape, sexual assault and boycott


 The "Qatar Airways scandal" with Australian women sparked the Qatar Airways website on Twitter, where dozens of tweeters launched a fierce and angry attack on her, accusing her of "violating human rights", "rape" and "sexual assault."

The tweeters on social media went to demand a boycott of "Qatar Airways" and to prevent it from traveling and landing in Australian territory, as they indicated that Qatar Airways is no longer on their list of airlines. The events of the incident date back to the second of October, when the authorities at Hamad International Airport forced all the women who were on the flight from Doha to Sydney to get off the plane. According to reports, all the women on board were forced to leave the plane, and upon their return, signs of discontent were evident on their faces, while at least one was crying.

It turned out that the Qatari authorities at the airport had found a newborn in one of the airport bathrooms, and therefore they asked all the passengers heading to Sydney to get off and forced them to remove their clothes and examine them to make sure that none of them was not the mother of the child. The Australian government expressed "serious concerns" as a result of the incident, and asked Qatar to provide answers after the incident, which Australian Foreign Minister Maryse Payne said, on Monday, that it is "a very worrying matter", and went so far as to describe it as "aggression." She added that she had never heard of such a matter throughout her life, in any context, and then indicated that the government has made this clear to the Qatari authorities.

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