Gulf ministers hold key talks
before GCC summit
NEWS / KUWAIT
GCC Kuwait Qatar Saudi Arabia
UAE
The Qatar crisis is expected to feature at the
forefront of discussions [File: Reuters]
Foreign ministers of six Gulf countries
have met in Kuwait in one of the
highest official encounters since a Saudi
Arabia-led quartet of Arab countries
severed relations with Qatar.
Monday's gathering came a day before
a key summit of the Gulf Cooperation
Council (GCC), a regional Arab alliance
currently facing its worst diplomatic
crisis because of the row over Qatar.
Sheikh Sabah Al Khaled al-Hamad Al
Sabah, Kuwait's foreign minister,
while opening the preliminary meeting,
said the GCC's unity and solidarity
remain intact despite "various
challenges and trials", the Kuwait News
Agency (KUNA) said.
KUNA said Abdullatif bin Rashid al-
Zayani, the GCC secretary-
general, called for the maintenance of
strategic ties between the member
states while describing the ministerial
meeting as one of the successes of the
summit.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman
Al Thani, Qatar's foreign
minister, previously said he hopes the
GCC summit would provide a blueprint
for ending the regional dispute.
The agenda of this year's summit has
not been made public, but the crisis is
expected to feature at the forefront of
discussions.
Saudi Arabia , Bahrain and the UAE cut
ties with Qatar on June 5 after accusing
it of supporting "terrorism". Qatar has
strongly denied the allegation.
Kuwait, the main mediator in the
standoff, sent out invitations to all GCC
member states last week. However, it is
not clear if all heads of state will attend
the two-day summit.
Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
Al Thani and Kuwait's Emir Sheikh
Sabah al-Ahmad Al Sabah are the only
heads of state confirmed to attend.
'Difficult situation'
Al Jazeera's Jamal Elshayyal, reporting
from Kuwait City, said the leaders of
Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain find
themselves in a "difficult situation".
"On one hand, if they attend, it'll be
taken as a sign of weakness by their
people after months of accusing Qatar
of 'terrorism', and saying that Qatar
should be ostracised," he said.
"However, if they don't attend, they will
be accused of sowing disunity among
the GCC and standing in the way of
Kuwait's efforts to bring everyone to
the table."
In October, Sheikh Al Sabah warned of
the potential collapse of the GCC if the
crisis continued.
The last GCC summit was held in
Bahrain in 2016.
The GCC was established in 1981 for
closer economic, trade and security
partnerships on the Arabian Peninsula.
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