Imperial Valley Press

Qatari FM says Gulf stando cannot be resolved in a day

-

Qatar’s foreign minister said Friday it would be unfair to describe U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s shuttle diplomacy to find a solution for a major feud in the Persian Gulf as a failure, insisting that the crisis “cannot be solved in a day.”

During a joint news conference with his Turkish counterpar­t, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n Al Thani also told reporters in Ankara that Qatar would continue to work with the United States and Kuwait to end the standoff with its four Arab neighbors.

Tillerson concluded his mediation efforts on Thursday, making no promise of an imminent breakthrou­gh but voicing optimism that Qatar and its neighbors might soon be willing to talk face to face.

“There is no criterion or evidence that indicates that (Tillerson’s visit) was a failure,” al-Thani said. “We cannot expect such a tense crisis to be solved in a day.”

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, whose nation has supported Qatar in the dispute, said he believed a solution would be possible “in the midterm.”

The Qatari minister again denied accusation­s his nation provides support to terror groups, accusing the four Arab states lined up against Doha of failing to provide “single evidence” against the tiny oil-rich nation.

Cavusoglu said that under a recent pact, Qatar agreed with the U.S. to strengthen its counterter­rorism efforts, citing this as evidence of Doha’s “sincerety” in countering extremist groups.

Qatar vehemently denies allegation of supporting extremist groups, though it has provided aid that helps Islamist groups that others have branded as terrorists, such as the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and the Palestinia­n militant group Hamas.

Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates say the counterter­rorism agreement does not go far enough to end the dispute.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States