The Borneo Post

Qatar says Gulf crisis puts US$2 billion in contracts at risk

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DOHA: The political crisis in the Gulf is putting at risk business deals worth US$2 billion in Arab countries that have cut ties with Qatar, an economic official in the emirate said .

Yousuf Mohamed al-Jaida, chief executive of the Qatar Financial Centre, said the majority of the contracts at risk – some US$1.5 billion (1.3 billion euros) – were in the area of constructi­on.

The level of exposure for businesses from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain has been negatively impacted alongside that of Qatari businesses in the current crisis.

“We sincerely believe that the impact is regional, not only local,” Jaida told reporters at a briefing in Doha.

“Qatar’s exposure to the blockade countries – the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain – is limited. This is a fact,” he said in English.

“There’s very few Qatari companies doing business in Saudi, UAE, Bahrain.

“There is on the other hand a couple of billion dollars of contracts of these blockade countries impacted in Qatar due to restrictio­ns in their own countries,” he added.

Some US$18-billion in shortterm deposits held by Saudi, UAE and Bahraini banks would mature in the next two months, but if the funds were withdrawn they could be “easily” covered by the Qatari government, said Jaida.

The economist said Qatar’s sov-

We sincerely believe that the impact is regional, not only local. Yousuf Mohamed al-Jaida, chief executive of the Qatar Financial Centre

ereign wealth fund, worth some US$335 billion, was largely unaffected as it was mostly invested outside the Gulf.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain are among a string of countries which this month cut ties with Qatar over accusation­s the emirate supports extremism. Doha denies the accusation­s. Gas-rich Qatar is currently in the middle of a massive US$200plus billion infrastruc­ture programme to help the country to prepare for the 2022 football World Cup.

Imports from Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain, including constructi­on materials and food, represent about 14 per cent of Qatar’s total imports, said Jaida.

The crisis has forced Qatar to turn elsewhere for long-term trade partners, especially those in Asia.

“We will continue to expand our global outreach, especially with Asia, which happens to be our largest export market,” said Jaida.

Imports from Asia account for 32 per cent of Qatar’s total imports.

Qatar has also shipped in food from Turkey and Iran since Saudi and its allies on June 5 suspended ties with the emirate. — AFP

 ??  ?? A general view of the Qatari Hamad port in the capital Doha. Imports from Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain, including constructi­on materials and food, represent about 14 per cent of Qatar’s total imports, said Jaida. — AFP photo
A general view of the Qatari Hamad port in the capital Doha. Imports from Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain, including constructi­on materials and food, represent about 14 per cent of Qatar’s total imports, said Jaida. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? The logo for Australian gambling company Tabcorp Holdings Ltd (TAB) is displayed outside a TAB branch in central Sydney. Australian gambling giants Tabcorp and Tatts were yesterday given the green light by the competitio­n tribunal to merge, paving the...
The logo for Australian gambling company Tabcorp Holdings Ltd (TAB) is displayed outside a TAB branch in central Sydney. Australian gambling giants Tabcorp and Tatts were yesterday given the green light by the competitio­n tribunal to merge, paving the...

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