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Sunday, August 31, 2025

Qatar bankrolled over a decade worth of films directed by Zohran Mamdani’s mom

Hamas-backing Qatar has bankrolled film and stage projects by socialist Zohran Mamdani’s Israel-bashing movie-director mom — and one of its royals is now pushing her son’s mayoral bid, The Post has found.

Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad Al-Thani, sister to the ruling emir, and the state-funded cultural institutions she controls, have supported Mira Nair and her creative projects since at least 2009, even extending a personal invitation to participate in the cultural program the country organized as part of the festivities around hosting the 2022 World Cup.

Since mid-June, Sheikha Al-Thani has taken to promoting Mamdani’s mayoral candidacy on social media, boosting news of favorable polling on Instagram and posting fire emojis under a TikTok video of him embracing Nair.

Mira Nair’s filmmaking has been backed by the Doha Film Institute for years, The Post found.Michael Loccisano

“They are buying somebody who is willing to be bought and at the time of their choosing they will ask for what they want,” warned Danielle Pletka, a foreign policy expert at the American Enterprise Institute think tank, of Nair’s Qatar ties. “They need a rainbow coalition of people who will support the ideology they promote: sometimes it will be Islamism, sometimes it will be antisemitism, sometimes it will be anti-Israel.”

The Post found extensive ties between the Queens assemblyman’s mom and the Qatari elite, including:

In 2009 her film ‘Amelia’ opened the first-ever Doha Tribeca Film Festival in the Gulf regime’s capital.

  • From 2010 until 2014, the Doha Film Institute — founded by Sheikha Al-Thani — underwrote a “bootcamp” to train Qatari students in screenwriting and filmmaking at Nair’s Maisha Film Labs in East Africa and in Doha, according to both organizations’ websites.
  • The Doha Film Institute also paid the entire $15 million budget of Nair’s 2012 film “The Reluctant Fundamentalist,” one of the first movies it produced. The flick, which had previously struggled to obtain financing, tells the story of a Pakistani immigrant who suffers mistreatment at the hands of U.S. authorities after 9/11, and opened the Doha Tribeca Film Festival that year.
  • Nair’s film “Nafas,” about historic Qatari pearl divers, was the first movie commissioned by the Qatar National Museum, which Sheikha Al-Thani chairs. It premiered at the museum’s 2019 opening, which Nair attended, and remains one of its flagship exhibits. Its budget has not been made public.
  • A company Nair set up in her native India did $102,000 in business in 2022 and 2023 with event management firm Agence Publics Qatar, which shares its chairman with the Qatar Engineering & Construction Co., a major player in Qatar’s piggy-bank oil and gas industry, according to LinkedIn and publicly-listed import records collected by private supply chain-monitoring firms.
  • The country’s most high-profile support for the auteur came in 2022, when state-owned Qatar Airways and Qatar Creates — another of the sheikha’s pet projects boosting the country as a cultural destination — produced an extravagant Nair-directed stage adaptation of her Golden Globe-nominated film “Monsoon Wedding” as part of the World Cup festivities.

Qatar’s sharia-inspired social policies, which bar women from marrying or holding government roles without a male guardian’s permission and which can punish homosexuality with torture or even death, are at odds with the progressive images Nair and Mamdani have cultivated.

The filmmaker has presented herself a voice for the “marginalized,” while her son has pledged to make New York an “LGBTQIA+ sanctuary city.”

Mira Nair and Zohran Mamdani attend the Gala Screening of ‘Queen Of Katwe’ on October 9, 2016 in London, England.Getty Images for Disney

Thousands of migrant workers died building facilities for the World Cup in Qatar’s 125-degree temperatures amid conditions human rights activists described as “modern day slavery.”

But in an interview with the website Qatar Happening during the soccer tournament and the ‘Monsoon Wedding’ musical’s run, Nair had only praise for the regime and her royal patron.

“Her Highness Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad Al-Thani has loved the movie but also supported the inception of this musical over several years,” Nair said.

Nair has boycotted the Haifa International Film Festival over Israeli policies she says “privilege one religion over another.” But Qatar bans non-Muslims from practicing in public, and the State Department has warned the country is “pursuing a number of actions which will ultimately lead to the eradication” of its Bah’aii religious minority.

Despite these well-documented abuses, as recently as November 2024, Nair was photographed attending a high-profile exhibit opening at the Qatar National Museum. There is no record of her ever speaking out on the regime’s notoriously deplorable human rights record. 

The filmmaker did not respond to repeated requests for comment, nor did the Qatari entities that have financed her work.

Mira Nair, seen here with Qatar’s minister of culture, Dr. Hamad Bin Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari, gets support from the controversial country even though its social policies bar women from marrying without a male guardian’s permission and punish homosexuality with torture or even death.Michael Loccisano

Critics have called Qatar “America’s ultimate ‘frenemy,’” as it provides support to anti-U.S. Islamist organizations while simultaneously hosting an American airbase. Jonathan Schanzer, executive director of the nonprofit Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, called it “both arsonist and firefighter”: backing destabilizing organizations like Hamas and the Taliban, then offering itself as a mediator with the groups on behalf of the West.

Schanzer said it was concerning only “one degree of separation” could exist between the country’s ruling elite the mayor of America’s biggest city, given how the Qataris have used their country’s vast wealth to bribe ex-New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez and figures in the European Parliament.

Nair has been supported by Qatar since 2009.ZUMAPRESS.com

“The Qataris are hyperactive in terms of international diplomacy, international investment, and everything that they do is designed to spread their funds and spread their influence,” he warned.

There is no publicly available evidence of a direct relationship between Mamdani and the Qatari regime. The assemblyman maintained he had never traveled to Qatar, nor received direct financial assistance from the country’s institutions.

But his campaign declined to answer whether he had received such assistance from his mother, or whether he had had contact with the sheikha, and would not directly condemn the Al-Thani family’s rule—only attesting to “his belief in universal human rights and the freedom to advocate for justice everywhere.”

“The attempt to weaponize his mother’s career against him is an insult to voters who care about actual issues, not manufactured distractions,” said campaign spokeswoman Dora Pekec.

https://nypost.com/2025/08/31/us-news/qatar-bankrolled-years-worth-of-films-by-zohran-mamdanis-mom/

NYC gunman on loose after wounding 3 at LES project

 A gunman shot up the entrance of an East Village apartment building early Sunday, leaving three people wounded, the shooter on the loose — and an elderly tenant calling his home “the closest to hell.’’

The potentially deadly shots rang out at the Lillian Wald Houses on Sixth Street in Alphabet City in Manhattan around 3:30 a.m. and sent victims to Bellevue Hospital and the shooter fleeing, police and bystanders said.

“I rolled out of my bed and hit the floor,” a second-floor resident told The Post. “Sounded like six or seven gunshots. I heard a guy yelling, ‘Mother f–ker! Mother f—ker!’

Mourners of the violence gather outside the building after Sunday’s shooting.Dakota Santiago/FreedomNewsTV
Fresh blood from the victims remains on the sidewalk Sunday.Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post

“In the last six months, this happened four times,” the resident said. “I blame the Housing Authority. They keep putting people in here with all these drug problems and stuff. They shouldn’t be putting these people here.”

An 88-year-old resident who only gave his name as Manny said, “They got two gangs here.

“Two teenage gangs, and they fight. This is the closest to hell.”

Locals said an argument had broken out among a large group of people gathered at the entrance to the complex before the gunman opened fire.

Police said one victim, who has at least four prior arrests, was shot in the face and back.

All three victims are expected to survive, police said. The shooter remains on the lam.

Residents at the housing complex say it is riddled with gangs.Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post

A 40-year-old man was hit in the groin, and the third was shot in the buttocks.

Footage of the aftermath showed several women pushing past police to look inside an ambulance where one of the victims was being treated.

One woman was seen collapsing and had to be helped to her feet by bystanders and police.

First responders load the wounded into ambulances.Dakota Santiago/FreedomNewsTV

Cops have not identified the gunman, who wore a red hoodie during the attack, and did not reveal a possible motive for the shooting.

“They all live here and these apartments, where one person has five rooms and he rents out to other people a room,” Manny said. “They’re all here, and they sell drugs. Right now, there are six apartments selling drugs in my building.

“I’ve lived here 57 years, and I’ll tell you this this is the worst place to live.”

https://nypost.com/2025/08/31/us-news/nyc-gunman-on-loose-after-wounding-3-at-housing-complex/

Post-war plan sees US administering Gaza for at least a decade: Washington Post

 A post-war plan for Gaza is circulating within US President Donald Trump’s administration that would see the United States administer the war-torn enclave for at least a decade, the relocation of Gaza’s population and its rebuilding as a tourist resort and manufacturing hub, The Washington Post reported on Sunday.

The newspaper said that, according to a 38-page prospectus it had seen, Gaza’s 2 million population would at least temporarily leave either through “voluntary” departures to another country or into restricted areas within the territory during reconstruction.

Reuters previously reported there is a proposal to build large-scale camps called “Humanitarian Transit Areas” inside – and possibly outside – Gaza to house the Palestinian population. That plan carried the name of the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, or GHF, a controversial US-backed aid group.

Anyone who owns land would be offered a “digital token” in exchange for rights to redevelop their property, The Washington Post reported, adding that each Palestinian who left would be provided with US$5,000 in cash and subsidies to cover four years of rent. They would also be provided with a year of food, it added.

The newspaper said the plan is called the “Gaza Reconstitution, Economic Acceleration and Transformation Trust, or GREAT Trust”, and was developed by the GHF.

GHF coordinates with the Israeli military and uses private US security and logistics companies to get food aid into Gaza.

It is favoured by the Trump administration and Israel to carry out humanitarian efforts in Gaza as opposed to the United Nations-led system, which Israel says lets militants divert aid.

In early August, the UN said more than 1,000 people have been killed trying to receive aid in Gaza since the GHF began operating in May 2025, most of them shot by Israeli forces operating near GHF sites.

The White House and State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment but the plan to rebuild Gaza appears to fall in line with previous comments made by Trump.

On February 4, Trump first publicly said the US should “take over” the war-battered enclave and rebuild it as “the Riviera of the Middle East” after resettling the Palestinian population elsewhere.

Trump’s comments about the possible forced relocation from Gaza angered many Palestinians and humanitarian groups.

The Israeli military has gradually escalated its operations around Gaza City over the past three weeks. On Friday it ended temporary pauses in the area that had allowed for aid deliveries, designating it a “dangerous combat zone”.

On Sunday, the head of the World Food Programme said Israel’s designation would impact food access and put humanitarian aid workers in danger.

“It’s going to limit the amount of food that they have access to,” WFP executive director Cindy McCain said on CBS News’ Face the Nation programme.

A report released earlier this month by the global hunger monitor, Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), said that around 514,000 people – nearly a quarter of Gaza’s population – are facing famine conditions in Gaza City and surrounding areas.

Israel has dismissed the IPC’s findings as false and biased, saying it had based its survey on partial data largely provided by Hamas, which did not take into account a recent influx of food.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Photo: AFP via Getty Images / TNS
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Photo: AFP via Getty Images / TNS

Israel is also considering annexation in the occupied West Bank as a possible response to France and other countries recognising a Palestinian state, according to three Israeli officials. The idea will be discussed further on Sunday, another official said.

Extension of Israeli sovereignty to the West Bank – de facto annexation of land captured in the 1967 Middle East war – was on the agenda for Netanyahu’s security cabinet meeting late on Sunday, which is expected to focus on the Gaza war, a member of the small circle of ministers said.

Any step towards annexation in the West Bank would be likely to draw widespread condemnation from the Palestinians, who seek the territory for a future state, as well as from Arab and Western countries.

It is unclear where Trump stands on the matter. The White House and State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A spokesman for Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar did not respond to a request for comment on whether Saar had discussed the move with his US counterpart Marco Rubio during his visit to Washington last week.

Netanyahu’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether the prime minister supports annexation and if so, where.

A past pledge by Netanyahu to annex Jewish settlements and the Jordan Valley was scrapped in 2020 in favour of normalising ties with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain in the so-called Abraham Accords brokered by Trump in his first term in office.

The office of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The United States said on Friday it would not allow Abbas to travel to New York for the United Nations gathering of world leaders, where several US allies are set to recognise Palestine as a state.
An Israeli border police officer orders a Palestinian shopkeeper to go inside his shop during a weekly settlers’ tour in Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Saturday. Photo: Reuters
An Israeli border police officer orders a Palestinian shopkeeper to go inside his shop during a weekly settlers’ tour in Hebron, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Saturday. Photo: Reuters

Israel is angered by pledges by France, Britain, Australia and Canada to formally recognise a Palestinian state at a summit during the US General Assembly in September.

The United Nations’ highest court in 2024 said Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories, including the West Bank, and its settlements there are illegal and should be withdrawn as soon as possible.

Israel argues the territories are not occupied in legal terms because they are on disputed lands, but the United Nations and most of the international community regard them as occupied territory.

Its annexations of East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights decades ago have not won international recognition.

Members of Netanyahu’s ruling coalition have been calling for years for Israel to formally annex parts of the West Bank, territory, to which Israel cites biblical and historical ties.

https://www.scmp.com/news/world/middle-east/article/3323838/post-war-plan-sees-us-administering-gaza-least-decade-reports