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・ Al-Qisa
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・ Al-Qubayba, Ramle
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・ Al-Qubeir
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・ Al-Quds (newspaper)
Al-Quds Al-Arabi
・ Al-Quds Brigades
・ Al-Quds College
・ Al-Quds Hospital
・ Al-Quds Mosque Hamburg
・ Al-Quds Open University
・ Al-Quds rocket
・ Al-Quds TV
・ Al-Quds University
・ Al-Qufl, Hadhramaut
・ Al-Qufl, San‘a’
・ Al-Qulad
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・ Al-Qunaya
・ Al-Qurain District


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Al-Quds Al-Arabi : ウィキペディア英語版
Al-Quds Al-Arabi

''Al Quds Al Arabi'' ((アラビア語:القدس العربي), English: "Arab Jerusalem") is an independent pan-Arab daily newspaper, published in London since 1989 and owned by Palestinian expatriates. The paper's motto is ((アラビア語:يومية سياسية مستقلة) "daily, political, independent"). Its circulation is estimated to be somewhere between 15,000 and 50,000. From the start until July 2013, its editor-in-chief was Abdel Bari Atwan, who was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Gaza Strip in 1950.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.abdelbariatwan.com/BIOGRAPHY.htm )
The paper has a reputation for being more populist and aggressive in its defense of the Palestinian cause and by extension more confrontational toward Israel, particularly when compared to the other prominent off-shore pan-Arab dailies, like ''Asharq al-Awsat'' or ''Al-Hayat'', which are owned by members of the Saudi royal family. As indicated by its motto, the paper stresses this distinction by emphasizing its independent ownership and viewpoint relative to the other prominent pan-Arab dailies.
==History==
''Al Quds Al Arabi'' was founded in 1989 and is headquartered in London. The paper first came to global attention after Atwan traveled to Afghanistan in 1996 to interview Osama bin Laden.〔 Like Al-Jazeera, contacts with terrorist groups such as Al-Qa'ida have consistently stirred attention and controversy in the West toward Atwan and the paper, particularly in the immediate aftermath of 9/11.
The fatāwā of Osama bin Laden in 1996 were first published in the paper. Several statements from the person or people who sign themselves the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades were also published in the paper.〔(London Editor Prays for Nuke Attack on Israel ) by Rick Moran, The American Thinker, 29 August 2007〕 On the fifth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, Atwan wrote: "The events of 11 September will be remembered as the end of the US empire. This is because all empires collapse when they pursue the arrogance of power." 〔(Press blasts US foreign policy ), ''BBC News website'', 11 September 2006〕 However, it should also be noted that Atwan explicitly condemned terrorist attacks on innocent Western civilians, as he wrote in one of his two books, ''The Secret History of al Qa'ida'': "I do not endorse or in any way support al-Qa'ida's agenda" and "I utterly condemn the attacks on innocent citizens in the West".〔''The Secret History of Al-Qa'ida'', Abdel Bari Atwan, Abacus (2006), ISBN 978-0-349-12035-5〕
Atwan unexpectedly left the paper as its chairman and editor-in-chief on 10 July 2013 and Sana Aloul became the editor-in-chief. The exact reason for Atwan's sudden departure isn't publicly known, but according to himself, "We had on-going and never-ending financial problems whose resolution, ultimately, required political compromises that I was not able to make. Sacrificing professional integrity, our independent editorial line and the space we allowed for free comment were red lines I could not cross."〔(Gulf News, 11 July 2013: ''Al Quds ex-editor: ‘Uncompromising integrity is what made us stand apart’ '' ) Linked 2013-11-09〕

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