Oman Daily Observer

Saudi to host China-arab summit

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Saudi Arabia plans to host a Chineseara­b summit on December 9 attended by Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visit to the kingdom, three Arab diplomats in the region familiar with the plans said on Wednesday.

Xi is scheduled to arrive in Riyadh on December 7, two of the diplomats and a fourth source with direct knowledge of the visit said, on a trip that comes at a sensitive time for Saudi-us relations that have been strained by a dispute over energy supplies and concerns over growing Chinese influence in the Middle East.

Invitation­s have gone out to leaders in the Middle East and North Africa for the Chinese-arab gathering, the diplomats said.

The Saudi government communicat­ions office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about Xi’s visit or summit timing. The Chinese foreign ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a query on Xi’s trip.

The Chinese delegation is expected to sign dozens of agreements and memoranda of understand­ing with Gulf nations and other Arab states covering energy, security and investment­s, the diplomats said without elaboratin­g.

Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs Adel al Jubeir earlier this month said that strengthen­ing trade ties and regional security would be priorities in the visit, which is also expected to include a China-gulf summit alongside the wider Arab gathering.

“The level of representa­tion depends on each country with many Arab leaders expected to attend, others would send at least their foreign ministers,” one of the Arab diplomats said.

Xi’s trip comes against the backdrop of Washington’s strained ties with both Beijing and Riyadh over difference­s on human rights and Russia’s war of Ukraine, and as Western countries face rising economic competitio­n from China, which they say uses its economic might as diplomatic leverage.

Gulf Arab states have in the past few years been strengthen­ing links with China and Russia at a time of growing regional doubts about the commitment of key security partner the United States to the region.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have resisted US pressure to “choose sides” when it comes to their ties with China, a major trade partner, and Russia, a fellow member of the OPEC+ oil producer alliance.

 ?? ?? Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs Adel al Jubeir earlier this month said that strengthen­ing trade ties and regional security would be priorities in the visit, which is also expected to include a China-gulf summit alongside the wider Arab gathering.
Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs Adel al Jubeir earlier this month said that strengthen­ing trade ties and regional security would be priorities in the visit, which is also expected to include a China-gulf summit alongside the wider Arab gathering.

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