Arab Times

Gulf leaders to hold ‘annual’ summit in Riyadh on Tuesday

Hollande to join GCC rulers to discuss Iran, Yemen and IS

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defendant and observe all legal procedures,” he told Reuters.

The sentencing of three Al Jazeera journalist­s to between 7 and 10 years in prison last year on charges of spreading lies reinforced the view of rights groups that the government was rolling back freedoms gained after a 2011 uprising.

Australian Peter Greste was deported in February, while RIYADH, May 3, (AFP): Solutions will be hard to find Tuesday when Gulf monarchs hold their annual summit in a region threatened by jihadists and a war in Yemen that has raised tensions with Iran. Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian Baher Mohamed are undergoing a retrial after a court found procedural flaws in the original case.

Among the other incidents cited by the Amnesty report were 25-year prison sentences given to 14 journalist­s and media workers last month on charges of spreading false informatio­n and inciting violence. That ruling can be appealed.

“You go down that list, it’s very complex,” Anthony Cordesman, of the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington, said of the challenges facing leaders of the oil- and gas-rich region.

The six Sunni-dominated Gulf Cooperatio­n Council states will gather in the Saudi capital, still worried that Shiite Iran might be able to develop an atomic bomb.

Their concerns persist despite assurances from Washington and Paris that an internatio­nal accord being drafted aims to prevent that.

A framework agreement between Tehran and the United States, France and other major powers limits Iran’s nuclear capabiliti­es in return for a lifting of internatio­nal sanctions.

French President Francois Hollande will attend the GCC summit, making him the first Western leader to do so since the bloc’s creation in 1981.

The visit will reinforce a deepening of Saudi ties with major powers beyond the United States.

Hollande will join rulers from Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

They will gather just over a week before the Gulf leaders travel to traditiona­l ally Washington. President Barack Obama called that meeting in a bid to allay their fears over any US rapprochem­ent with Iran, and to brainstorm on reducing regional conflicts.

Most Gulf states support a USled coalition bombing jihadists from the Islamic State extremist group in Syria and Iraq since last year.

IS has seized swathes of territory in the two countries, and has threatened Saudi Arabia.

Last month the kingdom said nearly 100 jihadists, mostly linked to IS, have been arrested and several plots foiled, including one against the US embassy.

Riyadh organised its own coalition this year in an effort to stop the advance of Iran-backed Shiite rebels in neighbouri­ng Yemen.

But pro- and anti-government forces continue battling in Yemen’s second city of Aden, aid groups warn over the humanitari­an situation, and al-Qaeda has seized territory in the resulting chaos.

Riyadh feared the Huthi rebels would take over all of Yemen and move it into Iran’s orbit.

Oman is the only Gulf state outside of the coalition which has bombed the rebels daily since March 26 to support the exiled government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi.

“All of these are issues where ... any given meeting makes progress but it doesn’t reach solutions,” Cordesman told AFP, questionin­g the degree to which GCC members cooperate with each other.

 ??  ?? Cuban President Raul Castro attends a welcome ceremony following his arrival at the Houari-Boumediene Internatio­nal Airport in Algiers, on
May 3. Castro arrived in Algiers for a three-day official visit. (AFP)
Cuban President Raul Castro attends a welcome ceremony following his arrival at the Houari-Boumediene Internatio­nal Airport in Algiers, on May 3. Castro arrived in Algiers for a three-day official visit. (AFP)

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