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No Red Sea solution without ceasefire in Gaza, Davos told

- TIM STICKINGS

Qatar has said the Red Sea crisis will not be solved without defusing the “real issue” of the Israel-Gaza conflict, as the war overshadow­s the World Economic Forum in Davos.

Politician­s and business executives are in the Swiss Alps for the annual gathering as Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping give another jolt to global trade and widen the fallout of the Israel-Gaza war. Saudi Arabia warned that the war was dragging the entire region into great danger.

Delegates were told by Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n Al Thani that US and British air strikes on Yemen’s Houthis would not contain the crisis without diplomatic efforts.

The situation in the Middle East “is a recipe for escalation everywhere”, Sheikh Mohammed said, warning against “just focusing on the symptoms and not treating the real issue”. “We need to address the real issue, which is Gaza, in order to get everything else defused,” he added.

“We shouldn’t just focus on those small conflicts, we should focus on the main conflict in Gaza and as soon as it’s defused I believe everything else will be defused.”

It would be up to the Palestinia­n people whether Hamas should be part of any postwar settlement, Sheikh Mohammed added. He called on Israel to make binding commitment­s to a two-state solution to the conflict.

If foreign powers do not approve of Hamas’s ideology, “you have to replace it with a better idea”, he said. “The better idea is to bring the two-state solution back to the table,” Sheikh Mohammed added.

After months of Israeli bombardmen­t, “Gaza is not there any more”. “It’s carpet bombing everywhere,” he said.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan used an appearance in Davos to call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

Asked whether Saudi Arabia could recognise Israel as part of a wider resolution of the Middle East conflict, Prince Faisal said “certainly”.

But “what Israel is doing now is putting the prospects for regional peace and security at

risk,” he said. “There is a pathway towards a much better future for the region, for the Palestinia­ns and for Israel. That is peace and we are fully committed to that.

“The first step for that is ceasefire. Ceasefire, of course, means ceasefire on all sides but that should be a starting point towards a permanent sustainabl­e peace, which can only happen through true justice for the Palestinia­ns.”

Prince Faisal said Houthi attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea were connected to the war in Gaza and an immediate ceasefire would address that threat.

President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen meanwhile warned that over-reliance on one country or trade route “comes with risks”.

Israel has shown no sign of bowing to internatio­nal pressure for a ceasefire after the war in Gaza, set off by Hamas’s surprise attack last October, passed the 100-day mark on Sunday.

Iran launched strikes on Iraq and Syria on Monday as tension spread across the region. Tehran said it was aiming at an Israeli intelligen­ce headquarte­rs and a military base that hosts US troops.

The conflict has also raised unrest in western countries as people take to the streets to support the Palestinia­n or Israeli cause.

This year’s Davos meeting has a theme of “rebuilding trust” after risk assessors warned on the eve of the summit that conflicts and disinforma­tion give the world a bleak outlook for the coming years.

Swiss President Viola Amherd warned guests that AI-fuelled disinforma­tion could worsen the distrust that some people feel in “all of us gathered here, and all political and business leaders”.

“When the alleged elite flaunts its wealth while many families can barely make ends meet, mistrust grows,” she said. “At that point, the internatio­nal community and government­s are no longer heard and no longer understood, even if they put forward great proposals.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, at Davos in person for the first time since Russia’s invasion, invited leaders to attend a global peace summit.

Switzerlan­d has agreed to host a separate summit on Mr Zelenskyy’s “peace formula” after meetings between security officials from 80 countries.

Mr Zelenskyy encouraged every country “that respects peace” to attend the talks.

He said Russian President Vladimir Putin had “stolen at least 13 years of peace” due to interventi­ons in Ukraine, Syria and other countries.

“Putin is trying to normalise something that should have ended in the 20th century. Putin embodies war,” he said. “We must make it possible for a just and stable peace.”

Ms von der Leyen urged European leaders to “continue to empower” Ukraine’s resistance amid persistent talk that western solidarity is fraying.

“Ukrainians need predictabl­e financing throughout 2024 and beyond. They need a sustained supply of weapons to defend Ukraine and regain its rightful territory,” she said.

“They need capabiliti­es to deter future attacks by Russia. And they also need hope. They need to know that, with their struggle, they will earn a better future for their children. And Ukraine’s better future is called Europe.”

 ?? AFP ?? A camp for displaced people in Gaza. Qatar has told the World Economic Forum a two-state solution to the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict is key to regional peace
AFP A camp for displaced people in Gaza. Qatar has told the World Economic Forum a two-state solution to the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict is key to regional peace
 ?? Bloomberg ?? Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, at the CEOs for Ukraine session on the first day of Davos
Bloomberg Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, at the CEOs for Ukraine session on the first day of Davos

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