Qatar row: Arab states send list of steep demands
Four Arab states have sent Qatar a list of 13 demands it must meet if it wants them to lift their sanctions.
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain are asking the Gulf state to shut down its broadcaster, Al Jazeera.
They are also asking Qatar to reduce ties with Iran and close a Turkish military base - all within 10 days.
Qatar, which sought to raise its profile in recent years, denies funding terrorism and fostering instability.
It
has been subjected to more than two weeks of unprecedented diplomatic
and economic sanctions, in the worst political crisis among Gulf
countries in decades.
The list was announced after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
urged Qatar's neighbours to make their demands "reasonable and
actionable".
Correspondents say there has been frustration in
Washington, which is seeking to resolve the dispute, over the time taken
by the Saudis and others to formalise their demands.
There was no
immediate response from Qatar but Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman al-Thani said earlier that it would not negotiate until the
punitive measures were lifted.
'Unspecified sum'
According to the Associated Press news agency, which obtained a copy of the list, Qatar must also:
- Sever all ties with the Muslim Brotherhood, which is banned in other Arab states
- Refuse to naturalise citizens from the four countries and expel those currently on its territory, in what the countries describe as an effort to keep Qatar from meddling in their internal affairs
- Hand over all individuals who are wanted by the four countries for terrorism
- Stop funding any extremist entities that are designated as terrorist groups by the US
- Provide detailed information about opposition figures whom Qatar has funded, ostensibly in Saudi Arabia and the other nations
- Align itself politically, economically and otherwise with the Gulf Co-operation Council
- Stop funding other news outlets in addition to Al Jazeera, including Arabi21 and Middle East Eye
- Pay an unspecified sum in compensation
An unnamed official from one of the four countries told Reuters news
agency that Qatar was also being asked to sever links with so-called
Islamic State, al-Qaeda and Lebanese Shia militant group Hezbollah.
According
to the document seen by AP, Qatar is being asked to shut down
diplomatic posts in Iran, expel any members of Iran's elite
Revolutionary Guard and only conduct trade with Iran that complies with
US sanctions.
The document specifies that both Al Jazeera and all
of its affiliates must be shut down. Al Jazeera, which has an
English-language branch, is one of the most widely watched Arabic
satellite channels.
Gulf countries and Saudi Arabia's close ally,
Egypt, have long accused the broadcaster of providing a platform for
Islamist movements and encouraging dissent - claims the broadcaster has
denied.
Turkish food
Turkey
has been supplying Qatar with food and other goods by air since the
sanctions started, and dispatched its first ship carrying food this
week, Reuters reports.
Turkish exports to the Gulf state have tripled from their normal
levels to $32.5m in that period, Turkish Customs and Trade Minister
Bulent Tufenkci said on Thursday.
However, Turkish Economy
Minister Nihat Zeybekci was quoted as saying that it was not sustainable
to maintain supplies through an air lift.
The Turkish military base in Qatar was set up under an agreement signed in 2017.
BBC
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