Skip to main content
05 Jul 2017 | 10:08 AM UTC

Qatar: Foreign minister delivers response to Saudi-led bloc’s demands /update 1

Qatari foreign minister arrives in Kuwait July 3 to deliver formal response to Saudi-led bloc demands; meeting of Gulf states planned July 5 to address ongoing diplomatic row

Informational

Event

Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani arrived in Kuwait on Monday, July 3, to deliver Doha’s formal response to the list of demands issued by the Saudi-led bloc of Arab states accusing Qatar of supporting terrorism. These countries– Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain, and Egypt – currently engaged in an ongoing diplomatic dispute with Qatar, previously agreed to extend the deadline by which Qatar must comply with their list of demands to July 4. The foreign ministers of these four countries are scheduled to meet in Cairo on Wednesday, July 5, to discuss the ongoing situation and appropriate actions.

Qatar remains under “blockade” by the aforementioned Gulf states as of Monday, July 3. The 13-point list of demands announced on June 23 includes closing the Al Jazeera media network, removing the Turkish military base in Qatar, curtailing ties with Iran, and severing all alleged ties with the Muslim Brotherhood and Hezbollah, among others. The Saudi-led bloc maintains that the demands are non-negotiable and has threatened economic sanctions, while Doha has publicly responded that the demands are baseless.

Context

As diplomatic tensions spiked, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE, and Egypt announced bans on all air, sea, and land travel to and from Qatar in a series of coordinated statements in early June. Emirates, Etihad, Air Arabia, and FlyDubai airlines all announced the indefinite suspension of flights to Qatar starting June 6. The three Gulf states and Egypt gave Qatari visitors and residents two weeks to leave their territories. Several prominent Gulf and Egyptian businessmen have urged investors to withdraw from Qatar, and the price of Liquid Natural Gas (LNG), of which Qatar is a major supplier, has fallen sharply. Qatar was also expelled from the Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen.

Gulf Arab states, Egypt, and Jordan have long resented Qatar's alleged support for groups such as the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood and the Islamic State (IS), among others. Saudi Arabia has repeatedly accused the country of broadcasting militant ideology, a reference to the Al Jazeera media outlet. Qatar allegedly used Al Jazeera to promote the Arab Spring uprisings in 2011, a move that threatened many of the Gulf monarchies and fueled the overthrow of the then-Egyptian president, Hosni Mubarak.
Qatar has also been heavily criticized for forging a relationship with Iran, considered by many Arab countries as a dangerous enemy.

Advice

Individuals in the region are advised to monitor the situation and contact their respective diplomatic missions for further information regarding security and transit to and from Qatar.