The State of Qatar has condemned the statement issued by Saudi Arabia two days ago regarding the crisis of the embargo imposed on it since June 5, 2017.

The Qatari Foreign Ministry said on Monday that the Saudi statement is not based on real bases, and reiterates the allegations that turned out not to be based on the facts.

The Qatari Foreign Ministry confirmed the lie of Riyadh's statement that the measures taken by Saudi Arabia were limited to severing consular and diplomatic relations, pointing out that Saudi arbitrary and illegal measures targeted Qatar and its people alike.

The statement added that the Saudi measures included the closure of the only land crossing of the State of Qatar, the closure of air and sea crossings, and the expulsion of all Qataris from Saudi territory, including pilgrims to the House of God.

The statement said that Saudi Arabia claims to welcome Qataris in its territory, while a number of cases of enforced disappearance of Qatari citizens in the Kingdom, including the recent enforced disappearance of a Qatari citizen and his son, recorded in the National Human Rights Commission this year.

The National Committee for Human Rights in Qatar issued a statement in which it considered that the Saudi statement is an attempt to mislead public opinion.It said that since the siege began, it has continued with the Saudi human rights bodies to remove the damages that affected the rights and remedies of the victims, and received no response from them.

On Saturday, Saudi Arabia issued a long statement published on the official news agency website detailing the crisis of the siege of Qatar, and contains a number of steps that the statement said that the Kingdom has taken to alleviate the Qatari people, whether in common families or in the areas of education, health, Hajj and Umrah.

The Saudi statement added that the solution to the crisis will not be without responding to the demands of the four countries of the embargo, in accordance with the efforts of Kuwait and within the framework of the Gulf Cooperation Council.