Leaders of the six Gulf Arab countries forming the Gulf Co-operation
Council (GCC) are due to meet in Riyadh to discuss progress in their
overall co-operation since their summit in December, when the Saudi
monarch urged for a "transition from the stage of co-operation to the
Union."
The summit on Monday is expected to discuss the Saudi proposal to
develop their six-nation council into a union, possibly starting with a
merger between Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.
The exact nature of this union remains unclear but Bahrain's state
minister for information, Samira Rajab, said it could follow the
"European Union model".
"The summit will discuss all the points, including the points of
union," said Bahraini Foreign Minister Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa after
preparatory talks in Riyadh on Sunday.
A committee made up of three representatives from each of the six
member states - the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait,
Qatar and Oman - will submit its findings on the proposed union to
Monday's summit.
The discussions will be closely watched on the streets of Bahrain
where the main opposition has denounced the idea of greater union.
Sheikh Ali Salman, the leader of Bahrain's main opposition formation,
Al-Wefaq, has criticised the project which he said must first be
subjected to a referendum that should take place in all GCC states.
"Bahrain gained its independence [in 1971] following a referendum"
overseen by the United Nations, said Salman in a speech on Sunday. continue Reading
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