ReutersÂÂÂÂ / Bloomberg
United Arab Emirates foreign minister His Highness Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan said on Tuesday that Arab countries boycotting Qatar over its support for terrorism were still awaiting a response to their demands via mediator Kuwait.
Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt are pressing Qatar to shut its Al Jazeera news TV station and scale back relations with Iran, Saudi Arabia’s arch-rival in the Gulf region, part of 13 demands
they want Doha to fulfill to end the crisis.
Qatar has said it delivered a response to mediator Kuwait, which will be discussed by the four countries at a meeting in Cairo on Wednesday after their deadline for Doha to accept the demands
expires late on Tuesday.
“We are still waiting for the response from our brothers in Kuwait regarding the response that they received from Qatar and once we examine it among ourselves we will take the decision of course,” Sheikh Abdullah said at a
news conference with his German counterpart in Abu Dhabi.
Officials from the UAE and Saudi Arabia have suggested that further sanctions, including the possibility of kicking out Qatar from the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council, could be imposed if Doha failed to heed the demands.
Asked about any further
sanctions, Sheikh Abdullah advised caution.
“I think it is premature to talk about the extra sanctions and steps and procedures to be taken by these countries,” he said.
“This depends on what we will hear from our brothers in Kuwait and the dialogue and conversations among ourselves and the examination of these responses.”
Doha’s deadline won’t be
extended: Saudi
Qatar’s July 5 deadline to comply with a Saudi-led bloc’s conditions for ending the month-long Gulf
crisis won’t be extended, Saudi
Arabia’s foreign minister said.
Qatar submitted its response to the coalition’s 13 demands on Monday, but no details have emerged. Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al Jubeir said at a news conference later in the day that the coalition will study the reply carefully before responding.
The deadline was initially set for July 3 but was extended by 48 hours at the request of Kuwait, which is trying to mediate an end to the dispute.
Jubeir, striking a more conciliatory tone than he’s ordinarily taken during the crisis, said his country sees Qatar as a friendly nation that has made some progress, but not enough. Anwar Gargash, the UAE’s minister of state for foreign affairs, said on Twitter that the region is at a “historical crossroads†and must either protect its unity or “go our separate ways.â€