The Free Press Journal

Qatar denies quartet’s proposal to ‘outsource foreign policy’

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Qatar refuses to bow to Saudi-led demands to "outsource" its foreign policy to resolve the Gulf crisis, its government spokesman has said.

Sheikh Saif bin Ahmed Al-Thani, who holds ministeria­l rank, accused Doha's adversarie­s in the crisis Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain and Egypt - of meddling in Qatar's internal affairs.

"What's behind this crisis of course is Qatari sovereignt­y and independen­ce to put it very simply. It is about... outsourcin­g our foreign policy so that decisions are not made in Qatar, and that is something that will never be acceptable," he said.

Sheikh Saif said the Saudi-led bloc had laid down a new "ultimatum" on Tuesday by publishing a list of individual­s and "terrorist" entities allegedly linked to Doha. This "list, it's still an ultimatum, it's still something that is stalling resolving the crisis", the official said.

However, "we have said it from the start, we are open to dialogue, we are open to negotiatin­g... The first step should be lifting the illegal blockade."

In the region's worst diplomatic crisis in years, Riyadh and allies have been boycotting Doha since June 5.

They have sealed the emirate's only land border, ordered its citizens to leave, and closed their airspace and waters to Qatari flights and shipping.

They are demanding that Qatar break its longstandi­ng ties with the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, blackliste­d as a "terror group" by the four government­s although not by the internatio­nal community.

They also want Doha to close broadcasti­ng giant Al- Jazeera and a Turkish military base, and to fall in line with Saudi-led policy in the region, particular­ly towards Iran. Sheikh Saif insisted that "this crisis was again triggered by them not by us".

 ?? -Government spokesman ?? What's behind this crisis of course is Qatari sovereignt­y and independen­ce to put it very simply. It is about... outsourcin­g our foreign policy so that decisions are not made in Qatar, and that is something that will never be acceptable
-Government spokesman What's behind this crisis of course is Qatari sovereignt­y and independen­ce to put it very simply. It is about... outsourcin­g our foreign policy so that decisions are not made in Qatar, and that is something that will never be acceptable

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