Imperial Valley Press

Arab terms to Qatar, US urges sides to talk

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food via cargo planes to Qatar after its neighbors closed down air, land and sea routes.

The United States said the demands on Qatar by its Mideast neighbors “will be very difficult to meet.” But the U.S. isn’t rejecting the demands outright.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson added in a statement Sunday that the list of demands from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates includes major areas that “provide a basis for ongoing dialogue leading to a resolution.”

He called on the Arab countries to “sit together” with Qatar to work through what he hoped would be “reasonable and actionable” demands.

In a sign of support, the Turkish parliament swiftly ratified a 2014 military agreement with Qatar earlier this month, allowing the deployment of troops to its base there. The military said a contingent of 23 soldiers reached Doha on Thursday. Turkey has also shipped supplies and food via cargo planes after

Erdogan said he made a similar offer to Saudi Arabia to set up a base there in the past but did not hear back from the king.

A Turkish foreign ministry statement Sunday reiterated that the deployment of Turkish troops in Qatar contribute­d to regional security and was not aimed at a specific country.

“Just like the presence of other foreign military bases or units in other countries of the region, our military presence in Qatar is principall­y based on a decision taken by the two countries relying on their sovereign rights,” ministry spokesman Huseyin Muftuoglu said.

Doha received a 13-point list from Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain that included demands to shut down the media network Al-Jazeera and cut ties with Islamist groups including the Muslim Brotherhoo­d. The energy-rich country said it was reviewing the ultimatum but added it would not negotiate under siege.

Turkey’s president said his country “admires and embraces” Qatar’s attitude, while slamming the demands by arguing they contradict internatio­nal law.

“Here we see an attack against a state’s sovereignt­y rights,” Erdogan said.

Erdogan called the demand that Qatar shut down Al-Jazeera an attempt to take away the network’s press freedom and urged rights groups to speak out against that.

Erdogan spoke to journalist­s after experienci­ng a diabetes-related blood pressure problem during prayers marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

 ??  ?? Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks to the media after the Eid prayers in Istanbul early Sunday. AP PHOTO alFitr
Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks to the media after the Eid prayers in Istanbul early Sunday. AP PHOTO alFitr

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