Gulf `mediation effort`
2017-06-13
ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Monday launched a `mediation effort` to resolve the rift between Qatar and other Gulf states.
PM Sharif, who arrived in Jeddah for a one-day trip, met King Salman bin Abdul Aziz.
According to the Press Information Department, the PM was received by Makkah Governor Prince Faysal bin Abdul Aziz. King Salman also hosted an Iftar reception in honour of the visiting delegation.
The prime minister is accompaniedby Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, Adviser to the PM on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz and Chief of the Army Staff General Q amar Javed Bajwa.
PM Sharif`s mission comes in tandem with several other initiatives aimed at resolving the Middle Eastern schism, with Kuwaiti emir Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah spear-heading a similar move. Saudi and Qatari delegations are, meanwhile, also holding talks in Washington DC, f acilitated by the US.
Mr Sharif started his journey back home late on Monday night.Although diplomatic observers are optimistic that a solution will soon be found, Arab countries allied with Saudi Arabia have so far taken a hard line on Qatar.
UAE Foreign Minister Anwar Gargash said in a recent interview that `there is nothing to negotiate` with Qatar.
Pakistan`s Foreign Of fice had earlier expressed its concern over the crisis unfolding in the Arab world, which had led Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt, Yemen and the UAE to sever ties with Qatar over allegations that the oil-rich island nation was sponsoring extremism and terrorism.
Foreign Office spokesman Nafees Zakaria had said: `Pakistan believes in unity among Muslim countries. We have made consistent ef forts for its promotion.
Unlike last year`s diplomatic crisis between Riyadh and Tehran, which PM Sharif had also attempted to defuse, a rift between Saudi Arabia and Qatar poses a bigger foreign policy challenge for Pakistan, which has strong political, economic and security ties with both sides.
In addition, the ruling Sharif family has historic relations with the ruling families in both Saudi Arabia and Qatar after being ousted by a military coup in 1999, the Sharif f amily went into exile in Saudi Arabia, while the Qatari royal family is one of the Sharifs` main benefactors.
In fact, the former Qatari prime minister`s letter in the Panama Papers case before the Supreme Court was a mainstay of the prime minister`s defence team.
There are worries that Pakistan would not be able to maintain its neutrality in the conflict for long.
Domestically, the government had been under pressure to stay out of the conflict and, instead, play its role in trying to defuse tensions between the two sides.