U.N. tells Qatar to mend fences with Gulf neighbors
Agence France-Presse
The U.N. Security
Council has told Qatar to sort out its differences with its Gulf neighbors,
China's ambassador said Monday, indicating the top UN body would not get
involved in the dispute.
Qatari Foreign Minister
Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani met with Security Council members on
Friday to discuss the rupture in ties with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt.
Chinese Ambassador Liu
Jieyi, who holds the council presidency this month, said "the best way
would be (that) the countries concerned work out a solution through dialogue
and through consultations among themselves, because we don't see any other
alternative to that."
"Whatever the
countries can do to mend the fences and to get back to good neighborly
relations, that would certainly be welcomed by China," said Liu.
Al-Jazeera reported that
the foreign minister had asked Security Council members to urge Saudi-led
nations to lift restrictions on the use of airspace and other transportation
links with Qatar.
Saudi Arabia and its
allies announced on June 5 they were severing ties with Qatar and later put
forward a list of 13 demands.
They accuse Qatar of
supporting extremism and of being too close to Saudi Arabia's regional
arch-rival Iran, which Doha has strongly denied.
The demands included
Doha ending support for the Muslim Brotherhood, closing Al-Jazeera, downgrading
diplomatic ties with Iran and shutting down a Turkish military base in the
emirate.
Sheikh Mohammed had
earlier said the list of demands was "made to be rejected" and on
Monday British lawyers for Qatar denounced the demands as "an affront to
international law."
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