GCC structure may have to
change: Kuwait's Sheikh Sabah
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Tuesday's meeting took place six months after
the announcement of Qatar siege [HI
Mohammed/Reuters]
The structure of the six-member Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC) might have
to change in the near future to face
upcoming challenges, the emir of
Kuwait has said.
Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al Sabah made
the remarks as a summit of the GCC in
Kuwait City concluded abruptly on
Tuesday instead of Wednesday, with all
the delegates leaving Kuwait after a
closed session.
"We might change the system of the
GCC to have mechanisms to better face
challenges," Sheikh Sabah said,
referring to the GCC crisis that began
on June 5.
On that day, Saudi Arabia , Bahrain and
the UAE - all GCC members - cut ties
with Qatar after accusing it of
supporting "terrorism", allegations that
Qatar strongly denies.
Sheikh Sabah also hinted at the
possibility of setting up a task force to
deal with future rifts within the GCC.
"The truth is, the GGC already has a
mechanism to form a task force to deal
with internal disputes," Al Jazeera's
Jamal Elshayyal, reporting from Kuwait
City, said.
"A lot of criticism in the last few
months has come from people asking
where has this task force been to solve
the GCC crisis.
"The reality is, if there was genuine
interest to solve this, then we would
have at least the deputy heads of state
here."
'Major progress'
The meeting in Kuwait City - the 38th
annual GCC summit - took place exactly
six months after the announcement of
the siege of Qatar .
"The mere fact that it convened is
major progress, especially in the
absence of true progress in bridging the
gap between Qatar and, on the other
hand, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Bahrain,"
Al Jazeera's senior political analyst
Marwan Bishara said.
Earlier on Tuesday, the UAE announced
that it had formed a new economic and
military partnership with Saudi Arabia
separate from the GCC.
That announcement, combined with the
absence of high-level officials from the
blockading countries, was loaded with
significance, our correspondent said.
"The countries that have laid the Qatar
siege decided to send low-level
diplomats to represent them. Bahrain
decided to send a third level diplomat,
the deputy prime minister. Saudi
Arabia sent Adel al-Jubeir, the foreign
minister, instead of a royal family
member," Al Jazeera's Elshayyal said.
"This shows that they no longer care
about the GCC."
Qatar's emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
Al Thani was one of the few to send a
royal family member to the Kuwait
summit.
"I am full of hope that the summit will
lead to results that will maintain the
security of the Gulf and its stability,"
Sheikh Tamim said.
Oman had announced that a high-
ranking official would represent Sultan
Qaboos bin Said Al Said, while al-Jubeir
led the Saudi delegation.
'Effectively dead'
The agenda of the Kuwait summit had
not been made public, but the Gulf
crisis was believed to be a top priority.
"It seems that there is an intention by
the Saudis and Emiratis, especially with
the timing of the announcement [of the
new partnership] today, to say that the
GCC is effectively dead," said Majed al-
Ansari from Qatar University.
"It is clear now that Emiratis and Saudis
have no intention of supporting
stability in the GCC, no intention of
supporting Kuwait's mediation efforts,
and no intention to end the crisis one
way or another."
The talks could have defined the very
future of the bloc that was established
in 1981 for closer economic, trade and
security partnerships on the Arabian
Peninsula.
In October, Sheikh Sabah, who has been
mediating between Qatar and the Saudi-
led bloc, warned of the potential
collapse of the GCC if the crisis
continued.
In late October,
the king of
Bahrain said his
country would
not take part in
any summit or
meeting attended by Qatar unless Qatar
"corrects its approach".
Sheikh Tamim has agreed to resolve the
crisis through dialogue, but Kuwait's
call for talks has not been accepted by
the blockading countries.
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