Carney Condemns Israeli Attack on Qatar’s Capital
The strike killed at least five Hamas officials and a Qatari officer, disrupting ceasefire talks and drawing widespread international condemnation, including from Canada.
- On Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2025, Israeli forces carried out a strike in Doha, Qatar, targeting senior Hamas leaders and killing at least five Hamas members and one Qatari security official.
- The strike followed Hamas' October 7, 2023, attacks in Israel that killed about 1,200 people and led to militants holding dozens of Israeli hostages in Gaza.
- Canada condemned the strike as a violation of Qatar's sovereignty that risks escalating Middle East conflict and undermining ongoing ceasefire negotiations led by Qatar.
- Prime Minister Mark Carney condemned the attack as a severe escalation of hostility and called on the global community to respond collectively, urging all parties to "take this incident into consideration."
- The attack raised alarms about regional stability by jeopardizing Qatar's role as a mediator in Gaza and threatening ongoing initiatives aimed at freeing hostages and progressing peace negotiations.
40 Articles
40 Articles
Carney Calls Israeli Strike in Qatar ‘Intolerable Expansion of Violence’
Prime Minister Mark Carney criticized Israel’s strike on Hamas’s leaders in Qatar. Israel targeted the headquarters of Hamas’s political leadership in Qatar on Sept. 9 as they were gathering to consider a U.S. cease-fire proposal for Gaza. Carney called it an “intolerable expansion of violence,” in a Sept. 9 post on X, adding it was an “affront to Qatar’s sovereignty.” Carney said the strike puts a cease-fire agreement at risk. “Regardless of th…
The Prime Minister condemns the Israeli attack on Qatar, claiming that it violates the country's sovereignty and risks aggravating the conflict.
Prime Minister Mark Carney condemns the Israeli military attack on Qatar, claiming that it violates the country's sovereignty and risks aggravating the conflict in the region.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 38% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium