Nelson Mail

Setback for blockade as deal signed

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QATAR: Rex Tillerson, the US secretary of state, gave his backing to the blockaded Gulf state of Qatar on Tuesday, signing a highly symbolic counterter­rorism agreement with Doha and describing as ‘‘reasonable’’ its refusal to meet the hostile demands of its neighbours.

The ‘‘memorandum of understand­ing’’ was said to include measures against funding terrorism, which Qatar has been accused of doing.

Terrorism support is one reason – cited by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain – for the blockade that has cut direct flights to Qatar and closed its only land border.

The timing of the agreement with the US could be significan­t, acting as a warning to Qatar’s four critics, all close western allies, to back off in the dispute. ‘‘I think Qatar has been quite clear in its positions and I think very reasonable,’’ Tillerson said, who signed the deal with his Qatari counterpar­t, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n al-Thani.

On the counterter­rorism deal, he added: ‘‘The memorandum lays out a series of steps the two countries will take over the coming months and years to interrupt and disable terror financing flows and intensify counterter­rorism activities globally.’’

Saudi Arabia won initial backing from President Trump for the embargo against Qatar, when the president tweeted support after his visit to Riyadh in May, when he secured a commitment from Muslim states to fight terrorism.

However, Tillerson, and James Mattis, the US defence secretary, were more equivocal and warned against allowing the dispute to escalate out of control. Qatar is home to an important US airbase, al-Udeid.

In another dig at Qatar’s critics, all of which were represente­d at the Riyadh summit, Tillerson said that Qatar had been the first to respond to Trump’s demands.

Boris Johnson, the British foreign secretary, also implicitly sided with Qatar while on a trip to the region on Saturday, describing the blockade as unwelcome and urging a de-escalation. Qatar rejected out of hand a list of 13 demands presented by its neighbours, including cutting support for political Islam and closing down the Al Jazeera television network.

The Saudi side has threatened more measures in retaliatio­n, but it is not clear what these would be. It has ruled out military interventi­on.

Officials in Doha believe the Saudis and the Emiratis have tried to persuade companies that do business in all three countries to drop Qatar.

If that is the case, they received another blow on Tuesday. The French energy company Total, at the announceme­nt of a new contract to run the al-Shaheen offshore oil field with Qatar Petroleum, said that it intended to maintain production for many years.

Gulf officials are now resigned to the crisis becoming protracted.

The Qataris are confident of being able to withstand economic pressure, while the Saudi side thinks that it has at least persuaded Doha to tone down its highly interventi­onist foreign policy.

In a joint statement released in their state media, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain said they appreciate­d US efforts in fighting terrorism but that they would closely monitor Qatar’s behaviour.

Qatar denies it supports militant organisati­ons and says the boycott is part of a campaign to rein in its independen­t foreign policy.

‘‘Today, the state of Qatar was the first to sign the executive programme with the United States to fight terrorism financing,’’ Sheikh Mohammed told the news conference.

Kuwait’s ruler, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah, expressed ‘‘bitterness’’ on Tuesday over what he described as an unpreceden­ted rift in the Gulf, but said he intended to push ahead with mediation efforts. The Times

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