Bahrain: Qatar coastguard stops two Bahraini vessels returning from maritime exercise

Three Qatari coastguard vessels stopped two Bahraini coastguard boats that were returning after taking part in a maritime exercise on Wednesday. (File/AFP)
Short Url
Updated 25 November 2020
Follow

Bahrain: Qatar coastguard stops two Bahraini vessels returning from maritime exercise

  • Bahrain said it would notify the GCC and hoped the incident would not be repeated

LONDON: Three Qatari coastguard vessels stopped two Bahraini coastguard boats that were returning after taking part in a maritime exercise on Wednesday.

The Bahraini vessels were then allowed to go, Bahrain's interior ministry said in a statement.

Bahrain considered it “an act inconsistent” with a security agreement between the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).

The state said it would notify the GCC and hoped the incident, which took place at 1 p.m., would not be repeated. 


Lebanon FM urges Iran to find ‘new approach’ on Hezbollah arms

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Lebanon FM urges Iran to find ‘new approach’ on Hezbollah arms

  • “The defense of Lebanon is the sole responsibility of the Lebanese state,” which must have a monopoly on weapons, Raggi told Araghchi
  • He called on Iran to engage in talks to find “a new approach to the issue of Hezbollah’s weapons”

BEIRUT: Lebanese Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi on Friday urged his visiting Iranian counterpart to find a “new approach” to the thorny issue of disarming the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group.
Lebanon is under heavy US pressure to disarm Hezbollah, which was heavily weakened in more than a year of hostilities with Israel that largely ended with a November 2024 ceasefire, but Iran and the group have expressed opposition to the move.
Iran has long wielded substantial influence in Lebanon by funding and arming Hezbollah, but as the balance of power shifted since the recent conflict, officials have been more critical toward Tehran.
“The defense of Lebanon is the sole responsibility of the Lebanese state,” which must have a monopoly on weapons, Raggi told Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, a Lebanese foreign ministry statement said.
Raggi called on Iran to engage in talks with Lebanon to find “a new approach to the issue of Hezbollah’s weapons, drawing on Iran’s relationship with the party, so that these weapons do not become a pretext for weakening Lebanon.”
He asked Araghchi “whether Tehran would accept the presence of an illegal armed organization on its own territory.”
Last month, Raggi declined an invitation to visit Iran and proposed meeting in a neutral third country.
Lebanon’s army said Thursday that it had completed the first phase of disarming Hezbollah, doing so in the south Lebanon area near the border with Israel, which called the efforts “far from sufficient.”
Araghchi also met President Joseph Aoun on Friday and was set to hold talks with several other senior officials.
After arriving on Thursday, he visited the mausoleum of former Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed in a massive Israeli air strike on south Beirut in September 2024.
Last August, Lebanese leaders firmly rejected any efforts at foreign interference during a visit by Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani, with the prime minister saying Beirut would “tolerate neither tutelage nor diktat” after Tehran voiced opposition to plans to disarm Hezbollah.