The Scotsman

US Secretary of State holds talks in Qatar to tackle Gulf deadlock

● Tillerson acts as mediator between country and four Arab neighbours

- By ADAM SCHRECK In Doha

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is visiting Qatar on a mission to break the deadlock between the tiny, energyrich Gulf nation and four Arab neighbours.

It is Mr Tillerson’s second stop on a shuttle-diplomacy circuit that is also expected to take him to Saudi Arabia, which shares Qatar’s only land border and is the most powerful of the four countries lined up against it.

He met Qatar’s emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-thani upon arrival in sweltering Doha. The pair were joined by Qatar’s foreign minister as well as the emir’s brother, Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad al-thani, a key point person for the United States on counter-terrorism issues.

Qatar was the second Gulf stop for Mr Tillerson, a former oilman with years of experience in the region, who also met Kuwait’s ruler Sheikh Sabah al-ahmed al-sabah on Monday.

The Kuwaiti leader has been acting as a mediator between Qatar and the quartet of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt.

The four nations broke off relations with Qatar and cut air, sea and land routes with it in early June and have accused Qatar of supporting extremist groups.

They later issued a 13-point list of demands to restore relations and gave Doha ten days to comply.

The demands include Qatar shutting down news outlets, including the media network Al-jazeera, cutting ties with Islamist groups such as the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, limiting ties with Iran and expelling Turkish troops stationed in the country.

Qatar strenuousl­y denies supporting extremist groups and has rejected the demands, saying that agreeing to them wholesale would undermine its sovereignt­y.

Mr Tillerson’s arrival in the Gulf coincided with the release by CNN of allegedly leaked agreements between Qatar and its neighbours dating from 2013 and 2014.

They include a handwritte­n 2013 deal between the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar to not interfere directly or indirectly in the internal affairs of fellow members of the six-nation Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), which also includes Bahrain, Oman and the UAE.

That agreement specifical­ly ruled out support for the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and other unnamed groups that could threaten the bloc’s members.

Qatar sees the Brotherhoo­d as a legitimate political force and has for years hosted its spiritual guide, Sheikh Youssef al-qaradawi.

That puts it squarely at odds with Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Egypt, which see it as a threat and label it as a terrorist organisati­on.

The four anti-qatar countries lent credibilit­y to the authentici­ty of the leaked agreements in a statement issued yesterday. The network said it received the documents from a source in the region.

They asserted that the documents “confirm beyond any doubt Qatar’s failure to meet its commitment­s and its full violation of its pledges”. Their 13-point list of demands in June was tied to those earlier deals and was “fully in line with the spirit of what was agreed upon”.

The head of Qatar’s government communicat­ion office, Sheikh Saif bin Ahmed althani, disputed that, saying the June demands “bore no relation to the Riyadh agreements”, according to a statement carried by the official Qatar News Agency. He called the “siege” by the four states a violation of the GCC charter.

US officials have said Mr Tillerson does not expect an immediate breakthrou­gh in the dispute and that a resolution could take months.

A senior adviser to Mr Tillerson, RC Hammond, has said the demands on Qatar were not viable but that there were individual items on the list “that could work”.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? 0 Rex Tillerson arrives in Doha, which is his second stop on a shuttle-diplomacy circuit that is also expected to take him to Saudi Arabia
PICTURE: AP 0 Rex Tillerson arrives in Doha, which is his second stop on a shuttle-diplomacy circuit that is also expected to take him to Saudi Arabia
 ??  ?? 0 A traditiona­l dhow floats in front of Qatar’s financial district
0 A traditiona­l dhow floats in front of Qatar’s financial district

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