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09 Jan 2021 | 01:22 AM UTC

UAE, Qatar: Emirati officials announce reopening of air, sea, and land borders with Doha beginning Jan. 9 /update 2

United Arab Emirates to reopen borders with Qatar from Jan. 9 following agreement to end three-year-long diplomatic dispute.

Informational

Event

Emirati authorities announced Jan. 8 that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) will reopen its air, sea, and land borders with Qatar beginning Jan. 9. The announcement comes a few days after Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Egypt signed a declaration at the 41st Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) summit in the Saudi city of Al-Ula Jan. 5, ending the more than three-year-long diplomatic dispute with Qatar. The full contents of the agreement have yet to be made public; however, Saudi Arabia and its allies have stated that they will restore full diplomatic relations with Doha in order to promote regional security and stability.

Context

The official signing of the agreement came a day after Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Ahmad Nasser Al-Sabah announced Jan. 4 that Saudi Arabia was reopening its airspace and land and sea borders to Qatar beginning the evening of Jan. 4. The agreement and the end of the diplomatic dispute marks a significant shift in Saudi Arabia and its allies' posture toward Doha. The quartet - as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Egypt are known - imposed a naval, air, and land blockade on Qatar in June 2017, demanding that Doha fulfill a list of 13 demands, including the closure of Al Jazeera news network and degradation of ties with Iran. Qatar has not fulfilled any of the 13 demands; however, Doha will likely scale down its ties with Tehran and groups like the Muslim Brotherhood.

The reopening of borders follows several Gulf states' normalization of ties with Israel, brokered by the US government. Kuwait and the US had since been engaged in efforts to mediate a solution to the political dispute.