Waterloo Region Record

Qatar weighs demands to end crisis

- Adam Schreck and Josh Lederman

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — With just days to decide, Qatar on Friday weighed an onerous list of demands by its neighbours as a way out of a regional crisis, and a top Emirati official warned the tiny country to brace for a long-term economic squeeze unless it is willing to acquiesce.

Qatar did not immediatel­y respond after receiving a clear set of demands for the first time, but the ultimatum was quickly rejected by its ally, Turkey, and blasted as an assault on free speech by Al-Jazeera, the Qatari broadcaste­r that Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and others are demanding to be shut down.

Qatar’s neighbours insisted the 13-point list of demands was their bottom line, not a starting point for negotiatio­ns. The Arab countries signalled that if Qatar refuses to comply by the 10-day deadline, they will continue to restrict its access to land, sea and air routes indefinite­ly amid mounting economic pressure on the Persian Gulf country.

“The measures that have been taken are there to stay until there is a long-term solution to the issue,” Yousef al-Otaiba, ambassador to the U.S. from the United Arab Emirates, told The Associated Press.

Still, he suggested the penalties would only be economic and diplomatic, adding: “There is no military element to this whatsoever.”

The demands from Qatar’s neighbours amount to a call for a sweeping overhaul of Qatar’s foreign policy and hydrocarbo­n-funded influence peddling in the region. Complying would force Qatar to bring its policies in line with the regional vision of Saudi Arabia, the Middle East’s biggest economy and gatekeeper of Qatar’s only land border.

They include shutting news outlets, including Al-Jazeera and its affiliates; curbing diplomatic relations with Iran; and severing all ties with Islamist groups including the Muslim Brotherhoo­d. The AP obtained a copy of the list in Arabic from one of the countries in the dispute.

Though Qatar is likely to reject the demands, the list answers the growing call from the United States and from Qatar for the countries to put their grievances in writing. It includes conditions that the gas-rich nation already has insisted it would never meet, including closing down Al-Jazeera.

Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain cut ties with Qatar over allegation­s that it funds terrorism — an accusation Doha rejects, but that U.S. President Donald Trump has echoed. The move has left Qatar under a de facto blockade by its neighbours.

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has tried to mediate and earlier this week urged the Arab nations to limit themselves to “reasonable and actionable” demands on Qatar. That call appeared to have been roundly ignored, and it was the Kuwaitis — who also offered to mediate — who delivered the list to Qatar on Thursday.

As the UAE and the others demanded Qatar terminate the Turkish military presence in the country, Turkish Defence Minister Fikri Isik said Friday the Turkish base aims to train Qatari soldiers and increase its security.

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