Al Shindagah

Tillerson is urging reconciliation and says the US has no plans to relocate its Central Command operations from Qatar. Such a quick-fire response is disappointing. Qatar’s isolation will deplete its coffers. We are already witnessing negative effects on the country’s stock market and airlines. Unfortunately, Qataris will not be immune from inconvenience. I sincerely hope our separation will be short and what’s happening is nothing more than a temporary family fall out. Qatar has always been part of our Gulf family and should remain so. On a positive note, the beneficiaries of the regime’s terrorist funding – Hezbollah, pro-Iranian Yemeni Houthis, Hamas, Jabhat A-Nusra, the Brotherhood, Daesh, Al Qaeda and others – will suffer a loss of liquidity. Too much bad water has gone under the bridge. There is no turning back unless Qatar can find a way to redeem itself. The regime of Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani and his son Tamim cannot be trusted. Its promises are worthless. Sheikh Hamad’s family has steered the country in the wrong direction and used its vast wealth for nefarious purposes. I believe Qataris are waking up to that indisputable reality. I am not in the business of telling the people of other nations how to react to their own governments; that is for them to decide. I pray they make wise choices. However, if the Emir of Qatar cares about the future of his country and his people, he would do well to consider stepping down and going into exile along with his close family members and loyalists. There are numerous states which would offer him sanctuary, states that would welcome a mega injection of funds. There are honest people within the Al Thani family capable of bringing Qatar back to the straight and narrow. Sheikh Saud bin Nasser Al Thani is one. He slammed Tamim in a tweet, writing: “We hoped that foreign policy would change and our hopes were disappointed after joined forces with Iran against your brothers and set up terrorist groups and published electronic battalions to beat your opponents…” There are branches of the extensive Al Thani family made up of true Gulf Arabs who genuinely love their neighbours’ soil as much as their own and want to play a role in bettering the Arab World, not injecting it with divisiveness. They should step up and make their voices heard so that the Qatari people can coalesce behind them. Saudi and the UAE, and their allies would be only too happy to welcome Qatar back to fold. Qatar’s Foreign Ministry has described the measures taken as “unjustified” and “based on claims and allegations with no basis in fact”. That statement whistles to the wind. There is a growing mountain of evidence that refutes such denials. I look forward to the recalibration of Qatar’s foreign policy in accordance with that of all GCC member states so that we can have the confidence to mend relations with Doha in good faith. How that is achieved rests on Qatari shoulders but, in the meantime, the Emirates and its Arab allies must do what they have to in order to protect their own people. Once all our countries around the Arabian Gulf are on the same page when it comes to battling the terrorist scourge and pushing back on Iran’s expansionism, they will be the safest and most stable on earth. Come back to us, Qatar! Come back to us as a loyal partner! Let us trust in God to bring us together in love and friendship before the rift becomes too wide to swiftly traverse. ©Shutterstock

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