The Phnom Penh Post

Arab League meets to discuss ‘violations’ by Iran

- Cairo

ARAB foreign ministers gathered in Cairo on Sunday at Saudi Arabia’s request for an extraordin­ary meeting to discuss alleged “violations” committed by Iran in the region.

The Arab League meeting comes as tensions have been rising between long-standing rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran, including over League member Lebanon.

Sunni Muslim powerhouse Saudi Arabia and Iran, the predominan­t Shiite power, have for decades stood on opposing sides of conflicts in the Middle East including in Syria and Yemen.

A diplomatic source said Riyadh was seeking to adopt a condemnati­on of “Iran and Arab militias linked to this country”.

A committee is to prepare a draft resolution on Iran to be discussed later by all ministers.

The meeting is also expected to address a Yemen rebel missile that was intercepte­d near Riyadh on November 4, and a pipeline fire in Bahrain on November 10.

Saudi Arabia’s powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has accused Iran of “direct military aggression” against the kingdom by supply- ing the Yemen rebels with ballistic missiles, but Tehran has denied any involvemen­t.

Bahrain has also blamed Iran for the pipeline fire.

In its request for the meeting, Saudi Arabia referred to those two incidents and “to the violations committed by Iran in the Arab region, which undermines security and peace, not only in the Arab region, but around the globe,” according to a memo seen by AFP.

Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates supported the Saudi request for an extraordin­ary meeting, which was also approved by Djibouti, the current chair of the pan-Arab bloc, it said.

Tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran have also soared since Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s shock resignatio­n on November 4.

For more than a decade, Lebanon’s political class has been largely split between Iranbacked Hezbollah and its allies, and a Saudi-supported coalition led by Hariri.

The Arab League has 22 members, but Syria’s membership was suspended at the end of 2011 following months of brutal repression of anti-government demonstrat­ions and an opposition movement supported by Gulf monarchies.

 ?? FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP ?? Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends a meeting with Lebanon’s Christian Maronite patriarch on November 14 in Riyadh. He has accused Iran of ‘direct military aggression’ against the kingdom by supplying the Yemen rebels with ballistic missiles.
FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends a meeting with Lebanon’s Christian Maronite patriarch on November 14 in Riyadh. He has accused Iran of ‘direct military aggression’ against the kingdom by supplying the Yemen rebels with ballistic missiles.
 ?? ADAM FERGUSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A refugee sleeps at the Manus Island detention centre on Papua New Guinea on November 12.
ADAM FERGUSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES A refugee sleeps at the Manus Island detention centre on Papua New Guinea on November 12.

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