Naharnet

Gulf Leaders Call for Unity, Closer Economy

The annual summit of Arab monarchs in the Gulf opened in Manama on Monday with a call for closer economic integration and unity in the face of the turmoil which has swept much of the Middle East.

King Hamad of host country Bahrain called for the Gulf Cooperation Council to provide "a security umbrella for its peoples" and urged "economic complementarity" between its six member states.

In his address to GCC counterparts, Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdul Aziz, standing in for King Abdullah who stayed away for health reasons, delivered an appeal for unity.

"We aspire to a strong union with integrated economies, a joint foreign policy and a common defense system," he said.

Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Sabah, Kuwait's emir, called for humanitarian aid for Syrian civilians and urged Iran to reach a peaceful settlement with neighbors, including over three Gulf islands in dispute with the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

He announced a donor conference for civilians caught up in the Syrian conflict to be held at the end of January at the request of the United Nations.

The two-day summit is to focus on strengthening "Gulf unity... especially politically, economically, in defense, security and culturally," Bahrain's Foreign Minister Sheikh Khaled bin Ahmed al-Khalifa said on Sunday.

The meeting is also expected to discuss the conflict roiling Syria and the situation in Yemen.

However, four of the six heads of state will not attend the annual gathering, which takes place in the wake of last year's Arab Spring uprisings which swept several Arab states but not the Gulf monarchies.

The overall gross domestic product in 2011 of the GCC states -- Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, the UAE and Saudi Arabia -- amounted to 1.37 trillion dollars, a diplomatic source said.

In 2003, they launched a symbolic customs union which has been beset with problems, failing to meet its target date of 2005, with the transition period systematically extended to 2015.

And a monetary union announced in 2009 with the aim of creating a common currency has also failed to materialize, with just four nations -- Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia -- signing up to it.

The six will also discuss plans to expand a security treaty they signed in 1994 with the aim of increasing security cooperation in the face of the Arab uprisings, sources said.

"The summit is taking place under extremely sensitive and delicate circumstances, whose impact must (on Gulf states) must be studied," said the GCC secretary general, Abdellatif Zayani, ahead of the meeting.

Rights activists called on the GCC leaders to introduce democratic reforms, in an open letter to the summit on Monday.

"It appears the events in the past two years," especially "aspirations for an effective popular participation... and creating constitutional monarchies," are not on the summit agenda, said the Gulf Forum of Civil Societies said.

Bahrain is still trying to cope with a Shiite-led uprising it crushed last year with the backing of Gulf troops, while a Kuwaiti political crisis has seen the opposition stage protests against an amendment to the electoral law.

The Shiite opposition in Sunni-ruled Bahrain has called on the summit "to exert pressure on Bahraini leaders to find a solution to the crisis," according to one of its leaders.

Witnesses said police on Monday dispersed Shiite demonstrators near Manama, not fear from where the summit is being held in the south of the country.

Saudi Arabia's Shiite-populated oil-rich Eastern Province, meanwhile, has been the site of sporadic protests, while the United Arab Emirates has arrested some 60 Islamist dissidents it claims were plotting against state security.

In the normally sleepy Oman, demonstrators took to the streets last year to demand improved living conditions and reforms, in a move that quickly subsided.

Source: Agence France Presse


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