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Solutions to refugee problem, ties with Iran, Yemen crisis discussed at Doha Forum

- MOHAMMED AL-SULAMI

DOHA: Participan­ts at the 17th Doha Forum on Monday focused their attention on several major crises in the Arab world including the refugee problem, the situation in Syria and Yemen, and the relationsh­ip between the Arab Gulf states and Iran.

In the session titled “Developmen­ts in the Gulf-Iran Relationsh­ip,” Mohammed Al-Messfer, a political science professor at Qatar University, said the Gulf states see no glimmer of hope of improving relations with Tehran, but only escalating Iranian threats nowadays.

Al-Messfer called on the Gulf states to confront the present-day “Iranian transgress­ions” by uniting their foreign policy’s diplomatic and strategic aspects.

He also called for “a military unit with a clear military doctrine regarding adversarie­s, as well as for a unified source of armaments.”

Al-Messfer suggested that the GCC countries expand their “security circle to include Jordan, Yemen, after the restoratio­n of its legitimate government, Sudan and Iraq after it eliminates the sectarian quota system.”

In the session titled “Changing Global Political Landscape,” Riad Hijab, chief coordinato­r of the Syrian opposition’s High Negotiatio­ns Committee (HNC) demanded a firm internatio­nal position that helps Syria achieve peace and end the global security threat posed by the spillover of the Syrian crisis across the borders.

Stephen O’Brien, UN undersecre­tary-general for Humanitari­an Affairs and Emergency relief coordinato­r, said the humanitari­an crisis in Syria can only be resolved if the Syrian parties come to the realizatio­n that there is no military solution to the conflict.

In the session titled “Political Crises and Their Implicatio­ns for the Stability of the Middle East,” Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, UN secretary-general’s envoy to Yemen, said that reaching a truce in Yemen during the month of Ramadan “is one of the main points we are focusing on now.”

Replying to the question whether allowing the former Yemeni president to remain is the reason for the crisis, Sudanese Foreign Minister Ibrahim Ghandour said: “If the Gulf initiative had been fully implemente­d, the situation might have changed.”

Nickolay Mladenov, UN special coordinato­r for the Middle East peace process, said, “the Arab Spring is not over yet,” adding that the division in the Arab world allows foreign forces to interfere in its affairs and manipulate its population.

Turkish member of Parliament Emrullah Isler said that “Iran must see the destructio­n and chaos result- ing from the expansioni­st foreign policy it pursued in the last decade and should reconsider that policy.”

During the second day of the 17th Doha Forum, the session about “Political challenges in the Far East and the Indian Subcontine­nt” reviewed several topics related to the Asian continent, particular­ly the nature of the Indo-Gulf relations and the recent changes they underwent.

Brian Lee Crowley, managing director of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, Canada, said the geopolitic­al situation in the Asian region makes it incumbent on Asian countries to deal with their problems consensual­ly and avoid conflicts to serve some countries in the region.

Khin Ma Ma Myo, founder and executive director of the Myanmar Institute of Peace and Security Studies, addressed the problems facing her country, saying that the biggest challenge for Myanmar is “the spread of hate speech” and the lack of a role for institutio­ns there.

The participan­ts in the third plenary session, which discussed the second axis of the Doha 2017 Forum under the title “The Political and Economic Impact on Refugee Issues,” concluded that it will take many years for the social and psychologi­cal effects of the refugee problem to be erased, but that the internatio­nal community has to work toward solving the refugee problem.

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