@wesamkabaha44379: حظ العداله مايل مع شفيق كبها #capcut #foryoupage #مشاهدات #viral #fyp

وسام كبها....كبهاوي
وسام كبها....كبهاوي
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Monday 13 July 2026 17:23:54 GMT
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razan10293834
razan❤️ :
االله يرحمه ويغفر له ويسكنه فسيح جناته يارب 🤲
2026-07-13 20:14:26
1
user2880035410539
بنت فلسطين القدس 🇵🇸🇵🇸 :
الله يرحمه ويغفر له ويسكنه فسيح جناته يارب العالمين
2026-07-13 18:48:24
1
user9522825815785
بسمة امل :
اغاني الزمن الجميل
2026-07-13 18:46:17
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wesamkabaha44379
وسام كبها....كبهاوي :
وان غابت عدالة الأرض فعدالة السماء لا تغيب
2026-07-13 17:28:47
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user780558185306
ام اياد :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-07-13 19:23:32
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abedkabaha4
Abed Kabaha :
❤️❤️💔💔💔💔💔💔💔❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-07-13 17:58:39
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"The Father Emir is gone. Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, who died on Sunday at 74, was the architect of modern Qatar. But that description, however apt, undersells the magnitude of what he actually achieved. He did not merely modernise a small Gulf state. He rewrote the operating system of sovereignty itself—proving that a nation of barely 300,000 citizens could achieve global indispensability not through armies, but through a brilliantly brutal recalibration of what power actually means in the twenty-first century. When Sheikh Hamad seized power in a bloodless palace coup in 1995, Qatar was a sleepy backwater, a peninsula that barely registered on the world’s diplomatic radar. Eighteen years later, when he voluntarily abdicated—shattering Gulf tradition in a move as unprecedented as it was wise—he left behind a nation that had become the world’s indispensable interlocutor. During his reign, Qatar’s GDP increased more than twenty-fourfold. By 2006, it had become the world’s largest exporter of liquefied natural gas. Today, its production capacity stands at 77 million tonnes per annum. But the numbers are merely the scaffolding. The architecture is what matters. Sheikh Hamad understood something that larger powers have never quite grasped: in a world of overwhelming military asymmetry, the weak do not survive by matching the strong. They survive by making themselves structurally necessary to the strong. This was not soft power. It was harder than any missile. It was the weaponisation of necessity itself. Consider the pillars he built. In 1996, he launched Al Jazeera, breaking the state monopoly on Arab media and giving Qatar a voice that reached 60 million viewers from Casablanca to Cairo. In 1995, he established the Qatar Foundation, transforming Doha into an educational sanctuary where Ivy League universities planted their flags and, to date, nearly 10,000 students have graduated across 60 academic programmes." ✍️ Opinion by Kurniawan Arif Maspul

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