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Qatar FM says talks with Saudi break 'stalemate'

By AFP - Dec 16,2019 - Last updated at Dec 16,2019

DOHA — Qatar's foreign minister on Monday voiced optimism over ending a bitter rift with Riyadh, saying early talks broke a "stalemate", but stressed Doha's unwillingness to downgrade ties with Turkey as a pre-condition.

Saudi Arabia along with its allies the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut all diplomatic and transport ties with Qatar in June 2017.

The four nations accused Doha of backing radical Islamists, including the Muslim Brotherhood, and seeking closer ties with Saudi arch rival Tehran — allegations Qatar vehemently denies.

"There [is] some progress... We have broken the stalemate of non-communication to starting communication with the Saudis," Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani told CNN in an interview broadcast on Sunday.

"Honestly, from our perspective in Qatar, we want to understand the grievances. We want to study them and to assess them and to look at the solutions that can safeguard us in the future from any other potential crisis."

The Saudi-led bloc made 13 key demands to resolve the dispute, including shutting down broadcaster Al Jazeera, downgrading ties with Iran and closing a Turkish military base on its territory.

In an interview broadcast by Al Jazeera on Monday, the Qatari foreign minister said Doha was unwilling to alter its relationship with Ankara, which helped the Gulf country weather the two-and-a-half-year crisis.

“Any country that opened up for us and helped us during our crisis, we will remain grateful [to] them... we will never turn our back [on] them,” he said.

He also said explicitly said he hoped progress with Saudi Arabia “would lead to positive steps with the others [boycotting nations]”.

But the UAE has sought to downplay the emerging reconciliation effort.

“The recent Qatari leaks regarding resolving Doha’s crisis with Saudi Arabia, without the three other countries, are a repetition of Doha’s quest to divide ranks and evade commitments,” Abu Dhabi’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash wrote on Twitter at the weekend.

In the interview with Al Jazeera, the Qatari foreign minister also denied Doha had direct ties with the Brotherhood, branded by several countries, including Saudi Arabia, as a terrorist organisation.

Last week, Qatar’s emir skipped a Gulf summit in the Saudi capital billed as a potential “reconciliation conference”, but leaders’ calls for integration offered signs of a thaw between Doha and Riyadh.

Recent “sports diplomacy”, which saw football teams from Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain travel to Qatar for the Gulf Cup, has raised hopes of a thaw.

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