Daily Dispatch

Turkey voices support for embattled Qatar

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TURKISH President Recep Tayyip Erdogan yesterday welcomed Qatar’s dismissal of a sweeping list of demands from Saudi Arabia and its allies in an escalating crisis and said the ultimatum was “against internatio­nal law”.

“We welcome [Qatar’s position] because we consider the 13-point list against internatio­nal law,” Erdogan was quoted as saying by the state-run Anadolu news agency.

Erdogan, who spoke to reporters after morning prayers at an Istanbul mosque, said the demands on its embattled regional ally Qatar had gone “too far”.

“What we are talking about here is an attack on the sovereign rights of a state,” he said.

“There cannot be such an attack on countries’ sovereignt­y rights in internatio­nal law.”

Qatar on Saturday denounced the ultimatum as unreasonab­le and an impingemen­t on the emirate’s sovereignt­y.

Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt want Qatar to meet the 13-point ultimatum in return for an end to a nearly three-weekold diplomatic and trade “blockade” of the emirate. The four Arab government­s delivered the demands to Qatar through mediator Kuwait on Thursday, more than two weeks after severing all ties with the emirate and imposing an embargo.

The document – which has not been published but has been widely leaked – includes the closure of Al-Jazeera television, a long-standing source of conflict between Doha and neighbouri­ng countries which accuse it of fomenting regional strife.

Notably, Doha has also been asked to shut a Turkish military base in the emirate.

The Turkish parliament passed a bill this month allowing Ankara to send up to several thousand troops to the Turkish base in Qatar.

Almost two dozen Turkish troops also arrived in Qatar as Ankara boosts military support for Doha.

Erdogan yesterday said demanding the withdrawal of Turkish troops from Qatar was a “disrespect to Turkey”.

Since the crisis erupted between Doha and its Gulf neighbours, Erdogan has vowed to back Qatar and rejected the accusation­s that it supports terrorism. — AFP

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