Stirling: Qatar’s UK business holdings should support wrongfully detained expats
Due Process International CEO identifies Qatar investments in UK as possible impediment to govt intervention for citizens detained in...
Due Process International CEO identifies Qatar investments in UK as possible impediment to govt intervention for citizens detained in Doha; same investments can be leveraged for resolving expat issues. Radha Stirling contacting major Qatar-owned UK companies to assist with cases of Jonathan Nash and Ranald Crook.

With an increasing number of British citizens suffering unjust treatment and wrongful convictions in Qatar, it is time to take stock of the Gulf state’s holdings in the UK, according to Radha Stirling, founder and CEO of Due Process International and Detained in Doha. “Many people are not aware of just how pervasive Qatar’s presence is in the United Kingdom,” Stirling says, “This is quite concerning given the severity of Doha’s treatment of British citizens in their country. We cannot help but wonder if the extent of these financial interests may be compromising Britain’s willingness to support and intervene on behalf of our citizens.”
Two of Stirling’s British clients in Qatar have been struggling for justice for years; Jonathan Nash and Ranald Crook. Both men were the victims of Qatar’s biased legal system, with Nash facing potentially a life sentence for bounced company cheques that his partners deliberately chose not to cover, and Crook suffering a targeted campaign of legal abuse by Qatari business partners with close ties to the royal family. “Ranald Crook, rather remarkably, has been acquitted in case after case,” Stirling explains, “His deportation was ordered, yet he remains under a travel ban and has been stuck in Qatar, away from his family, with no income, for years. The British government could easily intervene and resolve the situation with a few simple phone calls to the Interior Ministry, but seem reluctant to take any action. The family of Jonathan Nash has continuously sought assistance from the FCO, with little or no response.”
Stirling says Qatar’s economic clout in the UK may explain why British citizens arbitrarily detained in the oil rich nation are seemingly abandoned by their own government.

