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12:54 GMT, Wednesday, 1 October 2008 13:54 UK

Bahrain moots reconciliation body

Bahrainis burn Israeli flag during Jerusalem Day protest, Sept 2008

Bahrain's foreign minister has proposed forming a Middle East forum including Arab states, Iran, Israel and Turkey to resolve the region's many conflicts.

Sheikh Khaled al-Khalifa's comments in a newspaper interview clarified his speech to the UN this week calling for a Mid-East body "without exception".

Bahrain has no formal ties with Israel, but the sheikh said it did not matter.

"Let them all sit together in one group... This is the only path to solve our problems," Sheikh Khaled said.

"Why don't we all sit together even if we have differences and even if we don't recognise each other?" he was quoted saying by al-Hayat newspaper.

"If this is perceived as a dream, well, many dreams have become reality"
Bahrain's foreign minister

Correspondents say few Arab governments are likely to accept a permanent regional forum with Israel.

Most Arab states say they will not set up ties with Israel until it signs up to peace deals with the Palestinians and Syria.

Iran, which rejects any prospect of peace with Israel, is even less likely to join a regional block with it. Many Arab governments also view Iran with suspicion.

'Unrealistic'

Asked if the grouping should include regional foes with no relations, Sheikh Khaled was unequivocal: "With Israel, Turkey, Iran and Arab countries."

Bahrain is a strong ally of the United States, which is also Israel's main international backer.

The only Arab countries which have peace treaties with Israel are Egypt and Jordan. A handful of others hold political contacts without normalising relations.

The Arab League has adopted a proposal by Saudi Arabia that relations can only by further normalised if Israel ends its occupation of the Palestinian territories and Syria's Golan Heights.

Sheikh Khaled met Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni on the margins of the UN General Assembly last year.

He was unperturbed by al-Hayat's suggestion that it was unrealistic to imagine hardline Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad negotiating with Israel.

"If this is perceived as a dream, well, many dreams have become reality," he said.



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Related to this story:
Bahrain names Jewish ambassador (29 May 08 |  Middle East )
West 'embraces sham democracies' (31 Jan 08 |  Special Reports )
Iran 'biggest threat to Mid-East' (31 Jul 07 |  Middle East )
Arabs woo Israel over peace plan (25 Jul 07 |  Middle East )
Bahrain athlete loses citizenship (07 Jan 07 |  Middle East )
Country profile: Bahrain (04 Apr 08 |  Country profiles )

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