(Reuters) - Saudi Arabia,
the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain agreed on Sunday to return their
ambassadors to Qatar, signaling an end to an eight-month rift over
Doha's support for Islamist groups. The announcement was
made by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and came after an emergency
meeting in the Saudi capital Riyadh to discuss the dispute, which was
threatening an annual summit set to be held in Qatar's capital Doha in
December. In an
unprecedented move, the three countries withdrew their ambassadors from
fellow GCC member Qatar in March, accusing it of undermining their
domestic security through its support of the Islamist movement, the
Muslim Brotherhood. The
GCC statement said that Sunday's meeting had reached what it described
as an understanding meant to turn over a new leaf in relations between
the six members of the Gulf organization, which also includes Kuwait and
Oman. "Based on that, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia,
the United Arab Emirates and the kingdom of Bahrain decided to return
their ambassadors to the state of Qatar," the statement said. Saudi
Arabia, the UAE and Qatar have used their oil and gas revenues to
influence events in other Middle Eastern countries and any resolution of
their differences could alter the political environment in Libya,
Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Yemen. The
UAE and Saudi Arabia have both listed the Muslim Brotherhood as a
terrorist organization and see political Islam as a challenge to their
own systems of dynastic rule. Kuwait has attempted to mediate between
its fellow GCC members. Qatar
is seen to have been supportive of the Brotherhood in Egypt and the
UAE, and more recently in Libya. It has given sanctuary to some
Brotherhood members and extended citizenship to Sheikh Youssef
al-Qaradawi, a cleric with ties to the group. Riyadh
and the United Arab Emirates also see the Doha-based Al Jazeera news
channel as being a Muslim Brotherhood mouthpiece -- something Qatar
denies. Diplomats in Doha
said that amongst other things, Qatar had promised the UAE that the
Brotherhood would not be allowed to operate from the country. There was
no immediate confirmation of this. Qatar
holds the revolving presidency of the GCC and the country's Emir on
Tuesday publicly invited his fellow GCC rulers to Doha for the group's
annual summit. But diplomats had said some of them wanted to move the
meeting elsewhere to protest at what they saw as continued Qatari
support for Islamists.
Saudi Arabia, UAE and Bahrain end rift with Qatar, return ambassadors

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