The State of Qatar renewed the call to settle the Gulf crisis through constructive dialogue that preserves the sovereignty of states.

Talal Rashid Al Khalifa, First Secretary of the Qatar Mission to the United Nations - said during a session of the Security Council on the United Nations Charter - that the continued blockade of the State of Qatar is a flagrant violation of international law, and the provisions and purposes of the United Nations.

After more than two years since the outbreak of the Gulf crisis, the fortieth Gulf summit held in Riyadh recently carried a conciliatory atmosphere that renewed talk about resolving the crisis.

Last December, Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdul-Rahman Al-Thani said that little progress had been made towards resolving the dispute that broke out two and a half years ago with Gulf countries and Egypt.

The Qatari minister announced talks with Saudi Arabia on the Gulf crisis, noting that the conversation did not reveal the 13 demands laid down by the blockading countries for the return of relations with Doha, which Qatar considers incapable, and that the negotiations move away from them.

It is noteworthy that on June 5, 2017, Saudi Arabia, the Emirates, Bahrain, and Egypt cut diplomatic and economic ties with Qatar, and closed maritime, air, and land entry points with them, accusing Doha of supporting terrorism and interfering in the internal affairs of these countries, which Qatar strongly denied, accusing the blockading countries of seeking to undermine The sovereignty of the country and influencing its national decision.