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“Are you with us or with Qatar?” asked Saudi Arabia’s King Salman during a meeting with Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who had visited the Gulf Kingdom to find a diplomatic solution to the Qatar crisis.
The Saudi monarch asked Sharif to take a clear position on Qatar during their meeting in Jeddah on Monday, The Express Tribune reported, citing diplomatic sources. The paper said that Pakistan had reportedly told Saudi Arabia that it would not take sides in the Middle East’s diplomatic crisis after Riyadh had questioned Islamabad.
Pakistan has been treading a careful path since Saudi and other Gulf countries snapped diplomatic ties with Qatar, after accusing the oil-rich country of supporting terrorist groups.
However, the report claims that Saudi Arabia wants Pakistan to side with the kingdom. Citing a senior government official, who was briefed on the talks at the monarch's palace in Jeddah, the newspaper said that Pakistan would not take sides in any event that would create divisions within the Muslim world. It said:
Prime Minister Sharif's mediation visit to Saudi Arabia did not achieve any immediate breakthroughs. Saudi Press Agency (SPA) said King Salman and Sharif discussed the "latest regional developments” in addition to bilateral relations.
The current crisis in the Gulf is said to be the gravest that the Gulf Cooperation Council has faced in its nearly four decades of existence, although Qatar's relations with Saudi Arabia and some other Arab neighbours have not always been good.
(With inputs from PTI)
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