Arab Quartet Condemns Iranian Intervention in Arab’s Internal Affairs

Arab quartet’s foreign ministers - AAAWSAT AR Website
Arab quartet’s foreign ministers - AAAWSAT AR Website
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Arab Quartet Condemns Iranian Intervention in Arab’s Internal Affairs

Arab quartet’s foreign ministers - AAAWSAT AR Website
Arab quartet’s foreign ministers - AAAWSAT AR Website

The Arab quartet committee on Iranian interventions has condemned Tehran's continued support for terrorist and subversive acts against Arab states.

These include its continued firing of ballistic missiles from Yemen's territory into populated cities in Saudi Arabia, including the holy sites, in violation of 2015’s Security Council resolution 2216, which states that militias should not be armed.

In a statement issued at its 12th meeting in Cairo on Wednesday, the quartet committee, comprising of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, and Egypt as well as the Secretary-General of the Arab League, stressed its support for the measures taken by Saudi Arabia and Bahrain to address these aggressive acts to protect their security and stability.

It also condemned the Iranian-backed Houthi militias’ drone attacks at two oil pumping stations in Saudi Arabia and acts of sabotage against commercial vessels in UAE’s territorial waters and the Sea of Oman.

The committee denounced Secretary-General of the Lebanese Hezbollah Hassan Nasrallah's provocative speech, which included abuses rejected by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Yemen.

It said his speech marked a blatant interference in these countries’ internal affairs, intended to provoke sedition and incite hatred. It is an extension of the critical role played by this terrorist party, which is one of Iran’s arms that target destabilizing regional security and stability, the statement added.

It also called on the Lebanese government to “denounce Nasrallah’s statements and blatant interventions by one of its main components in line with the commitment to the brotherly relations, which bind Arab countries to the Lebanese Republic.”

The ministerial committee further expressed its “condemnation of the direct Iranian threats to international navigation in the Arabian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, as well as its threat to international navigation in the Red Sea through its regional proxies.”

Among these threats are Houthis’ targeting of a Saudi oil tanker in Bab al-Mandeb strait, in violation of principles of the international law.

It also slammed the “Iranian and Turkish interference in the Syrian crisis, and its serious implications on the country’s future, sovereignty, security, stability, national unity, and territorial integrity,” noting that such intervention doesn’t serve the efforts made to settle the Syrian crisis peacefully.



‘Impossible’ for People’s Republic of China to Be Our Motherland, Taiwan President Says

Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te visits Republic of China Military Academy, an officer training academy, for its 100th anniversary celebrations in Kaohsiung, Taiwan June 16, 2024. (Reuters)
Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te visits Republic of China Military Academy, an officer training academy, for its 100th anniversary celebrations in Kaohsiung, Taiwan June 16, 2024. (Reuters)
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‘Impossible’ for People’s Republic of China to Be Our Motherland, Taiwan President Says

Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te visits Republic of China Military Academy, an officer training academy, for its 100th anniversary celebrations in Kaohsiung, Taiwan June 16, 2024. (Reuters)
Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te visits Republic of China Military Academy, an officer training academy, for its 100th anniversary celebrations in Kaohsiung, Taiwan June 16, 2024. (Reuters)

It is "impossible" for the People's Republic of China to become Taiwan's motherland because Taiwan has older political roots, the island's President Lai Ching-te said on Saturday.

Lai, who took office in May, is condemned by Beijing as a "separatist". He rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims, saying that the island is a country called the Republic of China, which traces its origins back to the 1911 revolution that overthrew the last imperial dynasty.

The republican government fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong's communists who set up the People's Republic of China, which continues to claim the island as its "sacred" territory.

Speaking at a concert ahead of Taiwan's national day celebrations on Oct. 10, Lai noted that the People's Republic had celebrated its 75th anniversary on Oct. 1, and in a few days it would be the Republic of China's 113th birthday.

"Therefore, in terms of age, it is absolutely impossible for the People's Republic of China to become the 'motherland' of the Republic of China's people. On the contrary, the Republic of China may be the motherland of the people of the People's Republic of China who are over 75 years old," Lai added, to applause.

"One of the most important meanings of these celebrations is that we must remember that we are a sovereign and independent country," he said.

China's Taiwan Affairs Office did not answer calls seeking comment outside of office hours.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, in a speech on the eve of his country's national day, reiterated his government's view that Taiwan was its territory.

Lai, who will give his own keynote national day address on Oct. 10, has needled Beijing before with historical references.

Last month, Lai said that if China's claims on Taiwan were about territorial integrity, then it should also take back land from Russia signed over by the last Chinese dynasty in the 19th century.