Saudi Arabia and allies hail Trump warning to Qatar

Saudi Arabia and allies hail Trump warning to Qatar
A man walks past a charity billboard in the Qatari capital, Doha. (AFP)
Updated 10 June 2017
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Saudi Arabia and allies hail Trump warning to Qatar

Saudi Arabia and allies hail Trump warning to Qatar

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia and its allies Saturday welcomed an accusation by President Donald Trump that Qatar was bankrolling extremism but ignored a separate US call for them to ease their economic blockade.
Trump’s comments came as Washington joins intensifying international efforts to heal the worsening rift between the key Western Gulf allies, which has escalated into the region’s worst diplomatic crisis in years.
Qatar denies the allegations and has sent its top diplomat on a tour of European capitals in a bid to drum up support.
But its neighbors seized on Trump’s remarks as a vindication of their position and of the crippling sanctions they imposed on Monday.
The UAE welcomed “President Trump’s leadership in challenging Qatar’s troubling support for extremism.”
Yousef Al-Otaiba, UAE ambassador to the US, told the official WAM news agency: “The next step is for Qatar to acknowledge these concerns and commit to reexamine its regional policies. This will provide the necessary basis for any discussions.”
Saudi Arabia said an immediate change of policy by Qatar was essential.
“Fighting terrorism and extremism is no longer a choice, rather... a commitment requiring decisive and swift action to cut off all funding sources for terrorism regardless of its financier,” the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) cited an official source as saying.
Bahrain “stressed the necessity of Qatar’s commitment to correct its policies and to engage in a transparent manner in counter-terrorism efforts,” its official BNA news agency said.
Khalid bin Ali Al Khalifa, Bahrain’s justice minister, has threatened legal action against any political organization found communicating or expressing support for the people named in a new Qatar-linked blacklist.
The ministry would hold accountable “all those who employ religion to support organized ties or allegiances to a state” that targets the stability of other states, the minister said in a statement carried by state news agency BNA.
The three governments made no comment on separate remarks by US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson urging them to ease their land and sea blockade of Qatar, which he said was hindering the US-led campaign against Daesh and having humanitarian consequences for ordinary people.
Qatar’s neighbors have given its citizens 14 days to leave, banned Qatari flights from their airspace and closed its only land border.
Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani was in Moscow on Saturday after talks in Germany on Friday.
Qatar ally Turkey meanwhile hosted the Bahraini foreign minister for talks on the crisis.