Qatar’s emir on Friday called for dialogue to resolve a political crisis pitting his country against four Arab states, saying any talks must respect national sovereignty, but the call was unlikely to end the rift.
In his first speech since four Arab countries severed ties with Doha, a defiant Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani said life was continuing as normal, despite what he described as an unjust “siege.”
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain and Egypt last month cut ties and imposed sanctions on Qatar, accusing it of financing extremist groups and supporting terrorism, which the Qatari emir denied.
“Qatar is fighting terrorism relentlessly and without compromise, and the international community recognizes this,” Al Thani said in the televised speech.
He spoke hours after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the US was satisfied with Qatar’s efforts to implement an agreement aimed at combating terror financing and urged the four states to lift their “land blockade.”
It also comes days before Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, who had supported Qatar in the crisis, was due to visit Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to try to resolve the rift.
Earlier this month during a round of shuttle diplomacy, Tillerson signed a deal with Qatar to fight terrorism financing, part of efforts led by Kuwait to try to resolve the most serious rift in the Western-allied Gulf in decades.
An official comment from the four Arab countries had yet to be issued, but a Saudi royal court adviser described it as a piece of literary work written by a school student.
“Had it been written by a student in middle school he would have flunked,” Saud al-Qahtani wrote on Twitter.
Commentators hosted by the Saudi-owned al-Arabiya television also denounced the speech.
“This is a speech of obstinacy which sends messages that Qatar will not stop supporting terrorism,” said Ali al-Naimi, editor of an online news site based in the UAE.
The crisis revolves around allegations that Qatar supports Muslim militant groups, including in Syria and Libya, and hosts members of the Muslim Brotherhood.
It began after a speech in late May by Al Thani appeared on the state news agency’s Web site, which Doha said he had never made and indicated the Web site had been hacked from one of its neighbors, indicating the UAE.
The Washington Post, citing US intelligence officials, last week reported that the UAE had arranged for Qatari government social media and news sites to be hacked to post the fiery but false quotes.
The UAE denied any involvement.
Al Thani described the sanctions as a campaign that had been preplanned against Qatar, calling it an act of aggression against Doha’s foreign policy.
“Its planners planted statements to mislead public opinion and the countries of the world,” he said.
Al Thani vowed to withstand the sanctions and said he had instructed the Qatari government that Qataris should become more self-reliant and called for the economy to be opened up to foreign investments.
“The time has come for us to spare the people from the political differences between the governments,” he said, urging dialogue. “Any solution must respect the sovereignty and will of each state.”
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