Gulf News

‘Canada mishandled Saudi Arabia matter’

FORMER CANADIAN AMBASSADOR TO RIYADH SPEAKS OUT ON ISSUE

- Gulf News Report

Canada should have been more profession­al and more respectful in its approach with Saudi Arabia, a former Canadian ambassador to Riyadh has said.

“In my view, the purpose of foreign policy is to advance Canadian interests. Put simply, that is what we are trying to do,” David Chatterson, who was Canada’s diplomatic envoy from 2009 until 2012, said.

“So when I heard about the tweet, my question was ‘Well, what is our objective here? Was it to mitigate the circumstan­ces of Badawi? If so, we failed. Was it to influence the broader direction of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia? Again, I do not think we have done that. Have we advanced Canadian interests? Definitely not! My suggestion would have been to approach these kinds of issues in a much more profession­al, much more respectful manner, underlying and understand­ing of our counterpar­t in the kingdom,” he said on CBC News.

Chatterson was commenting on the crisis that broke out last week after Saudi Arabia rejected statements by Canadian officials as unacceptab­le interferen­ce in its domestic affairs.

Riyadh recalled its envoy to Canada, labelled the Canadian envoy as persona non grata, froze new investment and trade deals, relocated its thousands of students and patients out of Canada and suspended flights to and from Toronto.

“The hard truth here is that the world is not waiting for Canada to preach to them or to criticise them. That’s not really

My suggestion would have been to approach these kinds of issues in a much more profession­al, much more respectful manner, underlying and understand­ing of our counterpar­t in the kingdom.”

David Chatterson | Former Canadian ambassador to Riyadh

what most countries do. Most countries engage in a dialogue. They work in a very strategic manner. They work with likeminded countries, but issuing critical tweets is typically not the best way to build a dialogue,” Chatterson said.

“Saudi Arabia is a G20 country, with a growing economy, very young demographi­c and a market that is extremely interestin­g to countries like the US, the UK, France, South Korea, China, many European countries. They are there to do business and that is where they see their opportunit­ies.”

The diplomat explained Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman was “a reformer, a very, very active leader.”

“His overriding ambition is to reform the Saudi society and the Saudi economy. He is not interested in emulating any kind of western multicultu­ral society like Canada.

“It is being driven by domestic demographi­c and economic imperative­s. So he is forcing change in a very traditiona­l society. The dispute is centred on a Canadian government tweet that called on Saudi Arabia to release detained women’s rights activists.

The tweet referred to Samar Badawi and her writer brother Raif Badawi. He was arrested in Saudi Arabia in 2012 and later sentenced to 1,000 lashes and 10 years in prison for insulting Islam while blogging.

Raif Badawi’s wife and three children became Canadian citizens earlier this year

Saudi Arabia has affirmed their stance that no country has the right interfere in its domestic affairs, in a growing assertive stance. The kingdom expelled the Canadian ambassador and ordered 15,000 Saudi students, including about 800 medical trainees, to halt their studies in Canada. The Saudi state airline also announced it was suspending operations in Canada. The kingdom also cancelled new trade with Canada and barred wheat imports.

The Financial Times reported that the Saudi central bank and state pension funds instructed their overseas asset managers to dispose of their Canadian equities, bonds and cash holdings.

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