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FRANCE URGES END TO QATAR ROW

France’s diplomat calls on Qatar’s neighbors to lift measures affecting thousands of citizens

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France’s foreign minister on Saturday called on Qatar’s neighbors to immediatel­y lift measures impacting thousands of people in the Gulf, becoming the latest foreign diplomat to visit the region and attempt to find a resolution to a crisis that has dragged on for more than a month.

In early June, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut ties with Qatar and moved to isolate the small, but wealthy Gulf nation, canceling air routes between their capitals and Qatar’s and closing their airspace to Qatari flights. Saudi Arabia also sealed Qatar’s only land border, impacting a key source of food imports in the mostly desert nation.

The four countries also expelled all Qatari nationals, impacting mixed-nationalit­y families in the Gulf, students and people seeking medical treatment abroad, among others. Prior to the dispute, Qataris could travel visa-free between the Gulf countries.

France Foreign Minister JeanYves Le Drian said such punitive measures should end.

“France is calling for these measures to be lifted, especially ones that affect the (Qatari) population, specifical­ly measures that impact bi-national families that have been separated,” Le Drian said.

He was speaking to reporters in Qatar alongside Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n Al Thani, who said he welcomed mediation efforts and possible negotiatio­ns so long as they are founded on respect for “sovereignt­y.”

The Arab quartet has demanded Qatar end its support of extremist groups, but also its support of Islamist political dissidents they brand as terrorists, but which many Western allies do not. Other demands include shutting down Qatar’s flagship Al-Jazeera network, cubring ties with Iran and expelling Turkish troops stationed in Qatar.

Qatar has rejected the de- mands, saying that the list in its entirety infringes on national sovereignt­y. Qatar also rejects allegation­s it has supported terror groups.

Despite the blockade by the four Arab countries, life has not been impacted significan­tly in Qatar. The government has stepped in to help pay additional costs of shipping and has looked to its allies, like Turkey, for food imports.

With Qatar holding firm to its position, a top Emirati diplomat cautioned that the diplomatic standoff could be prolonged.

“We are heading toward a long estrangeme­nt,” UAE Minister of State for Foreign Relations Anwar al- Gargash wrote on Twitter. /

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