Experts have urged wealthy Gulf states to pump billions of dollars into their Arab neighbours to fend off the kind of unrest that has engulfed Syria and Iraq. Meeting at a conference in Bahrain, bankers, regional analysts and economists said massive development was needed to fight the poverty and lack of opportunities that are fuelling unrest.
"We need a pan-Arab Marshall development plan financed by rich Arab countries" in the Gulf, Ibrahim Dabdoub, deputy chairman of the International Bank of Qatar, told a conference in Manama organised by the International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS) that ended on Monday.
"At least a $100 billion (77 billion euros) is needed immediately to finance well-monitored development programmes over the next five years in a bid to contain Arab unrest," Dabdoub, a long-serving top banker, later told AFP. A post-World War II US initiative, the Marshall plan helped revive Europe''s shattered economy and bring long-term stability to the continent.
Fighting across the region, mainly in Syria and Iraq, has left thousands dead in the years since the mass demonstrations of the Arab Spring led to violent uprisings. Following the outbreak of sweeping unrest in late 2010 in Tunisia and later in Egypt, Libya, Yemen and Syria, the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) states announced $10 billion aid packages to fellow members Oman and Bahrain to help them face increasing popular demands.
They also pledged several billion dollars of aid to Jordan and Morocco, the only Arab monarchies outside the GCC, and made pledges to impoverished neighbouring Yemen. More recently, leading Gulf monarchies rushed around $20 billion in aid to Egypt after the military overthrew Muslim Brotherhood president Mohamed Morsi a year ago.
The six-nation alliance - grouping Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates - can afford to be generous with its neighbours. Its members have amassed surpluses of around $2 trillion due to high oil prices in the past decade and most of the funds are invested in the West. These funds have allowed them to become more involved in the region, with Saudi Arabia and the Emirates taking the lead, said Emile Hokayem, senior fellow for regional security at IISS. "But being more active means taking more risks... Gulf states are engaged in other Arab countries thus attracting more risks," Hokayem said.
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