Tuesday, 5 January 2016

Saudi Arabia: Iran row will not hurt Syria, Yemen talks

In Yemen, Riyadh leads a campaign against Iran-allied Shia rebels and troops loyal to the ex-president [Mohamed Al-Sayaghi/Reuters]

Source: ALJAZEERA

Saudi Arabia has said its decision to break diplomatic ties with Iran will not affect efforts to negotiate peace in Syria and Yemen - where the two regional heavyweights support opposite sides.
Riyadh on Sunday severed relations with Iran after its embassy in Tehran was set ablaze during protests against Saudi Arabia's execution of prominent Shia religious leader Nimr al-Nimr, who was put to death along with 46 other mostly Sunni convicts on terrorism charges.
Abdullah al-Mouallimi, the Saudi Ambassador to the UN, said on Monday that the row with Tehran "should have no effect" on attempts to end the wars.
"We will continue to work very hard towards supporting the peace efforts in Syria, in Yemen, wherever there might be a need for that," he said.


"How is that going to affect the behaviour of Iran, we do not know, you will need to ask the Iranians for that," al-Mouallimi told reporters in New York, accusing Tehran of not being supportive of attempts to find peace before this latest falling out between the two nations.
"They have been taking provocative and negative positions and lines, and as such I don't think that the breaking of relations is going to dissuade them from such behaviour."
Saudi Arabia cuts diplomatic ties with Iran
Earlier, Iran's foreign ministry said Saudi Arabia was using the attack on its embassy in Tehran as a pretext to fuel tensions.
"Iran ... is committed to providing diplomatic security based on international conventions. But Saudi Arabia, which thrives on tensions, has used this incident as an excuse to fuel the tensions," Hossein Jaberi Ansari, Iran's foreign ministry spokesman, said in televised remarks on Monday.

Saudi Arabia is leading a military intervention in Yemen against the Houthis - Shia rebels who it says are backed by Iran.
The kingdom is also part of the US-led coalition bombing the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Iraq and Syria.
Al Jazeera's diplomatic editor James Bays, reporting from New York, said diplomats at the UN were concerned about the impact the fallout could have on the wars in Syria and Yemen.
"Despite those comments [by al-Mouallimi], the United Nations knows that both Iran and Saudi Arabia are key players in both these conflicts," Bays said.
"And that's why the UN envoy for Syria is now in Riyadh. He'll be going on to Tehran and then, in the next few days, the UN envoy for Yemen will also be visiting the region."
On Sunday, UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon issued a statement criticising both the executions and the attack on the Saudi embassy in Tehran.

The US government also expressed public fears over the escalating war of words.
"We do continue to be concerned about the need for both the Iranians and the Saudis to de-escalate the situation," said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.
"We are urging all sides to show some restraint and to not further inflame tensions that are on quite vivid display in the region."

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