Saudi Arabia to lift Qatar blockade, open borders — Kuwait minister

In a
diplomatic breakthrough, Saudi Arabia is set to open its borders and airspace
to neighboring Qatar following a prolonged crisis.
Saudi
efforts to isolate Qatar were reportedly set to end on Monday, with Kuwaiti
Foreign Minister Amhad Nasser Al Sabah announcing that Riyadh would be opening
"the airspace and land and sea borders" between Saudi Arabia and
Qatar "starting from this evening."
The
minister also said that the Kuwaiti emir spoke with his counterpart in Qatar
and the Saudi crown prince. The talks between Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Nawaf Al
Ahmad Al Sabah, Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani and Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman showed that "everyone was keen on reunification."
The three
leaders are to meet and sign a statement to "usher in a bright page of
brotherly relations."
The
announcement comes ahead of a Gulf leaders' summit in the desert city of Al-Ula
on Tuesday.
State
media in Qatar said its ruler Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani has
travelled there for a meeting that is expected to see formal agreement towards
ending a dispute that has seen Riyadh and its allies boycott Qatar.
What was
the row about?
Tensions
between the two neighbors spilt into the open in mid-2017, when Saudi Arabia
cut diplomatic, trade, and travel ties with Qatar. The United Arab Emirates,
Bahrain and Egypt also joined the blockade. The four countries accused Doha of
backing radical Islamist movements and cozying up to Saudi Arabia's arch-rival
Iran.
The bloc
also set out 13 demands for Qatar, including closing the Al Jazeera news
network and downgrading links with Iran.
Qatar,
which is home to the largest US military base in the region, said the boycott
aimed to undermine the country's national sovereignty. The nation has some 2.3
million inhabitants, the overwhelming majority of whom are expats, and shares
its only land border with the much larger Saudi Arabia.
Closing
the rift
Kuwait has
been acting as a mediator between the two sides. In December 2020, Foreign
Minister Al Sabah signaled progress by saying that "all sides expressed
their keenness for Gulf and Arab unity and stability" while discussing the
issue.
At the
time, Qatar said that any solution should be based on mutual respect.
"No country
is in a position to impose any demands on another country ... Each country
should decide its foreign policy," said Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani.
It was not
immediately clear if Qatar accepted any of the demands previously listed by
Riyadh and its backers in order to achieve the compromise announced on Monday.
However, a
senior White House official told the Reuters news agency that Qatar will
suspend lawsuits related to blockade under the new deal. The United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt have yet to comment on the news, but the official
said it was "our expectation" that they would join Riyadh in lifting
the blockade.
Victory
for Jared Kushner?
Qatar's Al
Thani had also praised White House senior adviser Jared Kushner for his efforts
to bridge the gap during his Middle East tour in early December.
On Monday,
the White House official said Kushner helped negotiate the latest deal.
Kushner, who is the son-in-law of the outgoing US President Donald Trump, was
allegedly flying to Saudi Arabia to attend the signing ceremony.