Kuwait Times

Merkel in Saudi to hold talks on refugees

German Chancellor to visit UAE today

- — AP

German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrived yesterday in Saudi Arabia where she is expected to press royals on a number of sensitive issues, including taking in refugees, while also boosting important business ties in her first visit to the country in seven years.

Merkel met King Salman in the Red Sea city of Jiddah and is scheduled to visit the United Arab Emirates today. Saudi Arabia and the UAE are Germany’s largest trading partners in the Middle East.

During her talks with Gulf leaders, Merkel is expected to press them to do more to take in refugees and provide humanitari­an relief for those fleeing conflict in Muslim-majority countries. Her country has provided refuge to hundreds of thousands of people from Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n in recent years.

Merkel is also expected to raise the issue of Saudi Arabia’s funding for religious institutio­ns including in countries such as Mali and Niger, said senior German officials who spoke on customary conditions of anonymity.

Saudi Arabia recently closed several institutio­nal establishm­ents in Germany following pressure from Berlin, including the private King Fahd Academy in the southern suburbs of Bonn. German authoritie­s had previously expressed concern the school might be used to spread fundamenta­list ideology.

Niqab issue

Like other high-profile female visitors, Merkel did not cover her hair or wear a traditiona­l flowing black robe upon arrival in the kingdom. She is expected to meet Saudi businesswo­men during her two-day visit in a sign of support for women’s rights. Merkel herself backs a ban in Germany on civil servants wearing face veils and on the face cover being worn in public schools, courts and while driving. Most Saudi women wear the full face veil, known as the niqab, in line with the kingdom’s conservati­ve Wahhabi interpreta­tion of Islam.

Merkel is traveling with a business delegation that includes CEOs of major German companies. The kingdom is seeking to attract investment and diversify its economy away from oil, the backbone of its economy.

The official Saudi Press Agency reported the two sides signed a number of memorandum­s to enhance cooperatio­n in the fields of technology, energy, business and security. Despite a drop in oil prices that has forced the kingdom to curb spending, Saudi Arabia remains among the world’s top spenders on defense equipment.

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 ?? — AFP ?? RIYADH: A handout picture provided by the Saudi Royal Palace yesterday shows German Chancellor Angela Merkel (left) sitting next to Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud (right) during a meeting in Riyadh.
— AFP RIYADH: A handout picture provided by the Saudi Royal Palace yesterday shows German Chancellor Angela Merkel (left) sitting next to Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud (right) during a meeting in Riyadh.

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