Qatar has recalled its ambassador to Egypt, the state news agency QNA said late on Wednesday, in a dispute over Egyptian air strikes on Islamic State targets in Libya. The diplomatic row came just two months after a thaw began in relations between the two. Egyptian jets bombed sites in Libya
on Monday hours after Islamic State militants there released a video
showing the beheading of 21 Egyptian Christians, drawing Cairo directly
into the conflict across its border. Qatar expressed reservations over the attack at a subsequent meeting of the Arab League, angering Cairo. Saad
bin Ali al-Muhannadi, a Qatari foreign ministry official, cited
misgivings on "unilateral military action in another member (state) in a
way that could harm innocent civilians". Despite
Qatar's concerns, the Arab League put out a statement on Wednesday
expressing its "complete understanding" over Egypt's air strikes and
threw its weight behind Cairo's call for a lifting of the arms embargo
on the Libyan army. Qatar
also expressed reservations on this point. Al-Muhannadi said it would
give leverage to one party over the other before peace talks were
concluded and a coalition government was formed. The
Egyptian envoy to the League, Tareq Adel, blasted the moves, saying it
shows Qatar "supports terrorism," according to Egyptian news agency
MENA. But the
Western-allied and oil-rich Gulf Cooperation Council sided with Qatar,
suggesting it did not want to revive an internal rift which peaked when Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain withdrew their ambassadors from Doha last year over its support for Islamists. "These
accusations are baseless, distort the truth and ignore the sincere
efforts Qatar has exerted with its GCC neighbors to combat terrorism and
extremism on all its levels," GCC head Abdullatif Al-Zayani said in a
statement. Egypt, the
Arab world's most populous country, accuses Qatar of supporting the
Muslim Brotherhood, which was ousted from power in 2013 when the army
moved against President Mohamed Mursi following mass protests against
his one-year rule. Egypt in November heeded an appeal by Saudi Arabia
to back an agreement that ended the eight-month spat among Gulf Arab
states. That row was over Qatar's support for the Muslim Brotherhood,
which had been designated by several Arab countries as a terrorist
organization, and the promotion of Arab Spring revolts. Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has been keen to please Qatar's wealthy
Gulf neighbors -- key financial and political backers of his
military-backed government -- and may seek to defuse tensions now that
the Gulf has expressed its solidarity with the gas-rich kingdom. Qatari
Foreign Minister Khaled al-Attiya, in an interview with the pan-Arab
al-Hayat newspaper published on Thursday, said Doha did not support the
Muslim Brotherhood, adding that the rift that had divided Gulf Arab
nations was history. Attiya said that there were "differences of opinion, which is healthy, and not disputes" between Gulf Arab countries.
Qatar recalls ambassador from Egypt in dispute over Libya strikes
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Reuters
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