Kuwait Times

Qatar pulls troops from Djibouti-Eritrea border

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Qatar said yesterday it has pulled all of its troops from the border of Djibouti and Eritrea, east African nations that have a long-running territoria­l dispute which Doha had helped mediate. Qatar offered no explanatio­n for the move, though it comes amid a diplomatic dispute with other Arab nations that have cut diplomatic ties and now are trying to isolate Qatar from the rest of the world. While the dispute hasn’t escalated to a military confrontat­ion, Qatar’s military is dwarfed by neighborin­g Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, two of its biggest opponents in the crisis.

The 450 Qatari troops controlled a mountainou­s border crossing between Eritrea and Djibouti, said Nasredin Ali, a spokesman for Eritrea’s biggest armed group, known as the Red Sea Afar Democratic Organizati­on. Eritrean forces moved in after the troops departed, Ali said. Eritrea’s top diplomat to the African Union, Araya Desta, told AP the move came after Eritrea cut diplomatic ties to Qatar. However, Desta said his country wanted no confrontat­ion with Djibouti. “We don’t want to take any of Djibouti’s land,” Araya said. “The last time we had some skirmishes. It was unnecessar­y.”

Doha mediated the conflict between the two countries in 2010. Gulf nations have stationed troops in both African countries, using that as a jumping-off point for the ongoing Saudi-led war in Yemen. Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have accused Qatar of supporting terrorism and severed ties with Doha last week. Qatar denies the allegation­s, but its ties to Iran and embrace of various Islamist groups have put the country under intense scrutiny.

In Geneva, the United Nations human rights chief said yesterday he is “alarmed about the possible impact” of a diplomatic rift in the Persian Gulf on people’s lives. “It is becoming clear that the measures being adopted are overly broad in scope and implementa­tion, and have the potential to seriously disrupt the lives of thousands of women, children and men,” said Zeid Raad Al-Hussein. After cutting ties with Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain also ordered Qatari residents out though on Sunday, officials said there would be exceptions for mixed-nationalit­y families. Hussein said these measures do not sufficient­ly address all cases and expressed alarm that the UAE and Bahrain have threatened to jail and fine people who express sympathy for Qatar online.

Meanwhile, top donors trying to relieve the humanitari­an crisis engulfing war-torn Syria met in Doha yesterday. Countries have pledged $6 billion to help Syria, but so far only 22 percent of that has been funded, said Marcy Vigoda of the UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs. I’m “taking this opportunit­y to request this top donor group to use your leverage, to use your influence ... to ensure that pledges are turned into commitment­s,” Vigoda said. —AP

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