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SAUDI ARABIA WILL SPEND $750 MILLION TO MAKE FORMER ALLY QATAR INTO AN ISLAND

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SAUDI ARABIA WILL SPEND $750 MILLION TO MAKE FORMER ALLY QATAR INTO AN ISLAND
By Jason Lemon On Thursday, June 21, 2018 - 11:33

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The West Bay skyline of Doha, Qatar’'s capital city, as seen from the Corniche on December 29, 2015, in Doha, Qatar. The kingdom is accepting a bid for the project—which would transform its Gulf rival from a peninsula into an island—until June 25.PHOTO: WARREN LITTLE/GETTY IMAGES



Saudi Arabia expects to spend about $750 million to build a 37-mile-long canal cutting itself off geographically from its former ally Qatar.

The kingdom is accepting a bid for the project—which would transform its Gulf rival from a peninsula into an island—until June 25. Until now, five international companies have submitted bids for the project, which will create a canal about 656 feet wide and 50 to 65 feet deep, Gulf News reported.

Expected to be completed within one year, the waterway will allow ships up to 967 feet long and 108 feet wide to pass. Several seaside resorts are also planned along the canal. The winner of the bid to build the project should be announced within three months, and financing will come from Saudi Arabia’s private sector as well as that of close ally the United Arab Emirates, according to Arabian Business.

Saud al-Qahtani, a prominent member of the Saudi Royal Court and adviser to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, shared a video on social media this week with the caption: “Starting digging the Salwa Canal. Congratulations to the Saudi people for this wonderful project that will transform the small terrorist state of Qatar into an island,” Daily Sabahreported.

The Qatari Embassy to the U.S. did not immediately respond to a request for comment for this article.

For just over a year, Qatar has been cut off diplomatically and economically from former allies Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt. The fellow Arab states have accused Doha of supporting terrorism and extremism.

Saudi Arabia and its block have issued a list of demands from the tiny—but very wealthy—Gulf state before sanctions will be lifted. Doha has declined to give in to the demands, which include the closure of state-owned Al Jazeera and other media organizations and curbing relations with Iran.

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After a year of the blockade, Qatar also appears relatively unfazed, with the International Monetary Fund predicting in March that the nation’s economy will grow by 2.6 percent in 2018, up from 2.1 percent in 2017, saying the crisis has proved “manageable.”

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Reports of the canal’s construction first circulated in April. State-linked Saudi newspapers al-Riyadh and Sabq reported that in addition to a canal, the kingdom would construct a military zone and a nuclear waste dump between itself and Qatar.

Anwar Gargash, the UAE’s minister of state for foreign affairs, appeared to confirm the reports on Twitter at the time. He said the proposed “true geographical isolation” is “proof of Qatar's failure to manage and solve its crisis.”
 
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Ugly ugly ... ugly fitnah ... people in Muslim world need to wake up, start taking active stance against these fitnah which contributes to deaths and suffering of your own people while also hindering your ability to develop. Really we shouldn't be having this discussion if we were observing our Islamic ethics, but we are distant today and the result is obvious to everyone. Huge disputes in whole Muslim world between multiple ethnicities or even of same ethnicities. Encourage your leadership to good and only good.
 
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I don't want Pakistan to get involved overtly, but personally my sympathies lie completely with Qatar, having seen their society from up close. I support Qatar in this petty dispute, for what it's worth. Although I hope common sense prevails and both sides sit down and sort their differences out peacefully.
 
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I don't want Pakistan to get involved overtly, but personally my sympathies lie completely with Qatar, having seen their society from up close. I support Qatar in this petty dispute, for what it's worth. Although I hope common sense prevails and both sides sit down and sort their differences out peacefully.

Can Qatris now come for bird hunting ?
 
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Foreigners jumping up and down while having no clue about this "dispute" (that has nothing to do with the actual people of both countries who are the same and share everything in common) and blindly believing in some news that is not even sourced.

Everything was explained in this thread below.

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/vide...nal-towards-the-gulf-to-separate-qata.564057/

BTW KSA can do whatever it wants on its own territory. If we assume that this will ever become a thing (which it will not). Qatar, with all due respect to them, are the richest ant in the world that moreover hosts the largest US base in the region. Other than that the 350.000 native Qataris would surrender immediately at the first sight of a Saudi Arabian tank rolling across the Salwa border. Let's be honest here. Not like KSA would ever invade Qatar. If that was the goal of the House of Saud, this would have been done decades ago. In fact it has already been done 2 centuries ago (during the first and second Saudi states).
 
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NO, my opinion on that hasn't changed. Neither the Qataris should be bird hunting here, nor the Americans hunting from their birds.

Public don't tolerate Arabs... they attack them without support of state but Americans is different ball game, even when state forbids locals allow them to hunt markhor.
 
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Public don't tolerate Arabs... they attack them without support of state but Americans is different ball game, even when state forbids locals allow them to hunt markhor.

I get the gist of what you are saying but I don't think this thread is the right place for this discussion. Although, in all honesty, my original post also had nothing to do with the thread.
 
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Public don't tolerate Arabs... they attack them without support of state but Americans is different ball game, even when state forbids locals allow them to hunt markhor.

Just out of curiosity (I know nothing about the topic) but out of 500 million Arabs, how many Arabs go to Pakistan to hunt some birds (that also exist in the Arab world)? 100 people at most? Also how many times have Arabs been attacked? I assume that those Arabs (along with other foreigners) are accompanied by local Pakistanis.

How come does 100 Arabs or something (I suspect from a few ruling families) = 500 million Arabs? Where is the logic in that?

Why not specify and speak the truth by saying that it's some Arab royals (minority moreover) that are doing the hunting accompanied by local Pakistanis?

I remember some thread about Qatari hunters in Pakistani and locals here got a seizure while they never said a word about the many, many more local poachers.

It sounded to me like just another venue where they could rant against Arabs. I see it again here. Quite pathetic, lol.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1364278

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1646619/1-illegal-hunting-wildlife-teams-launch-action-poachers/

Imagine Arabs saying that Pakistans are criminals due to a minority of criminal Pakistani expats in the GCC. Or what about those grooming gangs in UK or the Pakistani terrorists/radicals in the UK. Pakistanis in the UK are rightly appalled when they are accused of those crimes collectively (if anything Pakistanis should know what this collective blaming is about) but some Pakistanis here are very quick to demonize all Arabs due to the faults of a minority.


Double standards but it is to be expected from the same users that pride themselves on this double standard and don't hide it.

Before this ridiculous KSA-Qatar dispute, the same people that are defending Qatar, were calling Qatar for all kind of negative words. Hard to take seriously.


What devilish plan

Devilish? Is God now involved in some tourist projects now? Or are you only saying that due to Turkey's (Erdogan's and AKP's) close ties with Qatar and the Al-Thani ruling family? I wonder what else it can be, lol.
 
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