Thursday, March 28, 2024

Saudi Arabia, Bahrain expel Lebanon envoys over Yemen war

Saudi Arabia and Bahrain ordered the expulsion of the Lebanese ambassadors on Friday. The move comes following comments by Lebanon's information minister criticizing Saudi-led war on Yemen.

Saudi Arabia has banned all imports from Lebanon and given the Lebanese ambassador 48 hours to leave the kingdom after footage emerged earlier this week of information minister criticising the Saudi Arabia-led coalition’s war in Yemen, state news agency SPA reported.

Saudi Arabia also banned its citizens from travelling to Lebanon and recalled its ambassador.

“The Kingdom’s government regrets the outcomes of the relations with the Lebanese Republic due to the Lebanese authorities ignoring facts, and their continued failure to take corrective measures,” the statement carried by SPA on Friday read.

Hours later, the Kingdom of Bahrain ordered the Lebanese ambassador to leave the country within two days for the same reason, Bahrain’s foreign ministry said.

Ties between Lebanon and Saudi Arabia were already strained, but they soured further on Tuesday after footage began circulating online of Information Minister George Kordahi making critical remarks about the Saudi-led war against Houthi rebels in Yemen. He stated the televised interview was recorded more than a month before he was appointed minister.

Kordahi noted the Iran-aligned Houthis are “defending themselves … against an external aggression”.

The former celebrity TV presenter also added the long-running war was “futile” and called for it to end, which offended the Saudi Arabia-led coalition forces.

The game show host-turned-minister announced his comments were a personal opinion and were made before he joined the government, but said he refuses to be blackmailed by any entity.

In a statement on Friday evening, Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati stated he “regretted” the Saudi moves.

“We also appeal brotherly Arab leaders to work and help to overcome this crisis in order to preserve Arab cohesion,” Mikati added.

Earlier this week, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Bahrain summoned their ambassadors to Lebanon in response to the comments, while the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) – also comprising Qatar and Oman – condemned Kordahi’s remarks.

There were some calls from pro-Saudi leaders for Kordahi to be removed from the government.

The Lebanese authorities, including Mikati and President Michel Aoun, dismissed Kordahi’s comments and said they do not reflect the Lebanese government’s position.

“It is true that we disassociate from conflicts, but we don’t disassociate ourselves from any position that is in solidarity with Saudi Arabia or the Gulf countries,” Mikati noted in a press statement earlier this week.

Saudi Arabia accused Iran-backed Hezbollah of influencing what they said was Lebanon’s inadequate response to Kordahi’s remarks.

Hezbollah, which Saudi Arabia considers a terrorist organisation, backs the Houthis in Yemen and it has praised Kordahi for his remarks.

“[Hezbollah] made Lebanon an arena and a launching pad for implementing projects of countries that do not wish well for Lebanon and its brotherly people,” the Saudi statement read.

The Lebanese information minister’s remarks were the latest in a series of controversies between Lebanon and Saudi Arabia over the past year.

Saudi Arabia designated Hezbollah’s financial institution Al-Qard Al-Hassan as a “terrorist entity” on Wednesday, and has imposed an indefinite ban on Lebanese produce and agricultural products since April after foiling an attempt to smuggle more than five million illegal amphetamine Captagon pills hidden in a shipment of pomegranates inside Jeddah Port.

Saudi Arabia’s statement on Friday also added Lebanon has failed to “take the measures demanded by the Kingdom to stop the export of the scourge of drugs from Lebanese exports to the Kingdom”.

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