Erdogan backs Qatar in diplomatic rift, says Gulf states’ demands violate international law
Turkish
President Tayyip Erdogan © Yasin Bulbul / Presidential Palace /
Reuters
RT,
25
June, 2017
In
the latest development in the lingering political crisis between the
Gulf states, Turkey’s leader has sided with gas-rich Qatar, saying
the sweeping ultimatum the Arab monarchies have given Doha runs
“contrary to international law.”
Speaking
after a prayer at the end of the holy Muslim month of Ramadan,
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the sweeping ultimatum
the Gulf states have put to Qatar is an attack on the
country’s “sovereign
rights.”
He
said Turkey can “appreciate
and embrace” Qatar’s
resistance to the overwhelming pressure from Saudi Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Egypt.
An
alliance led by Saudi Arabia presented Qatar with a comprehensive
list of demands on Friday. The 13-point ultimatum promises that the
trade embargo and diplomatic isolation of the country will end if its
terms are accepted.
The
demands stipulate that Qatar must close its major television network,
Al-Jazeera; reduce cooperation with Saudi Arabia’s archrival, Iran;
cut off contacts with Islamist groups, including the Muslim
Brotherhood; and force Turkey’s military out of the country. Qatar
was given ten days to comply with the demands and agree to monthly
checks.
Saudi
Arabia and its allies consider the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist
organization, Iran as an existential threat, and Al-Jazeera as a
propaganda instrument that Qatar uses to interfere in their domestic
affairs.
Doha
responded the same day, saying the ultimatum was
neither “reasonable” nor “realistic” and
infringed on the country’s sovereignty.
Erdogan
also lambasted the requirement that the Turkish military leave Qatar
as a sign of disrespect. “Even
though they still didn’t come back to us on this, asking Turkey to
pull back its troops [from Qatar] is disrespectful to Turkey,” he
said. Qatar agreed to host a Turkish military base in 2014.
Turkey
has sent large shipments of food and dispatched a small contingent of
troops with armored vehicles to support of Qatar amid the political
row, but toned down its rhetoric and urged the Arab nations to mend
their relations after the Gulf capitals expressed deep concern over
the deployment.
“We
don’t want any sort of tension with any Gulf state. We would also
not want any of them to be in a row with each other. This has been
our approach to this crisis since the beginning,” Ibrahim
Kalin, Erdogan’s aide, said on Thursday.
A report from al-Jazeera - as if it was happening to someone else
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