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Viewing cable 05SANAA462, U/S DOBRIANSKY'S MEETING WITH FOREIGN MINISTER
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
05SANAA462 | 2005-03-04 13:02 | 2011-08-30 01:44 | CONFIDENTIAL | Embassy Sanaa |
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 SANAA 000462
SIPDIS
PLEASE PASS TO MCC, G/NICOLE BIBBINS SEDACA
E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/04/2015
TAGS: PREL PGOV PTER PHUM EAID ECON KMPI KDEM PINR YM COUNTER TERRORISM DEMOCRATIC REFORM ECON COM
SUBJECT: U/S DOBRIANSKY'S MEETING WITH FOREIGN MINISTER
QIRBI
Classified By: DCM Nabeel Khoury for reasons 1.4 b and d.
¶1. (C) Summary. On February 24 Under Secretary for Global
Affairs Paula Dobriansky thanked Foreign Minister Abu Bakr
al-Qirbi for Yemen's partnership in the Global War on
Terrorism and encouraged the ROYG to expand intelligence
sharing cooperation with the USG. In response to the FM's
complaints over Democracy Assistance Dialogue foot-dragging
by the Italians, U/S suggested that the ROYG plan to work
with the Democracy Transition Center in Hungary to share
their experiences. U/S encouraged the ROYG to use their MCC
threshold status to accomplish reform in the area of
corruption. Raising press freedom, Qirbi acknowledged U.S.
concerns and said it was a "challenge" that the ROYG is
addressing. Qirbi closed the meeting expressing hope for the
direction reform is taking in Yemen. End Summary.
--------------------
Intelligence Sharing
--------------------
¶2. (C) U/S thanked Foreign Minister Qirbi for Yemen's role as
a partner in the fight against international terrorism,
congratulated him for Yemen,s success in combating terrorism
within Yemen, and assured him of the high value the U.S.
places on its cooperative CT relationship with Yemen.
Pressing for increased USG access to information collected by
the Yemeni security services, U/S said "information sharing
is an area of this cooperation we would like to see expand."
--------------------------------------------- ----
Democratic Reforms - BMENA Dialogue for Democracy
--------------------------------------------- ----
¶3. (C) U/S commended Yemen,s bold stance on democracy, and
credited Yemen's participation in the BMENA process with
re-focusing other regional actors on democratic reform. U/S
highlighted ROYG membership in the BMENA Dialogue for
Democracy (DAD) as an opportunity to enhance Yemen's
leadership role. Qirbi agreed, saying "we were once very
enthusiastic about it, perhaps too enthusiastic." Qirbi
shared ROYG frustrations with its (Turkish and Italian) DAD
partners, "it has been eight months and we are stuck over
financial matters -- the Italians do not want to pay."
---------------------------------
Beyond BMENA...How About Hungary?
---------------------------------
¶4. (C) Without directly raising ROYG's desire to establish a
permanent DAD center in Sanaa, Qirbi asked U/S to weigh in
with the Italians. "At the last meeting in Rome," complained
Qirbi, "I told the Italians that if we are not going to do
something, then let's not waste our money on travel!" U/S
responded that the U.S. continues to engage the Italians on
how best to utilize the DAD, but added that Yemen should not
overlook other international opportunities. Mentioning
Hungary's proposed Global Center for Democracies in
Transition, U/S suggested it was an excellent forum for Yemen
to share its considerable experience in running elections
with other new democracies. "We are ready to engage with
anyone," Qirbi responded, "after all, the value of democracy
is not in talking but in participation."
-------------------------------
Fighting Corruption Through MCC
-------------------------------
¶5. (C) U/S told Qirbi she was delighted that Yemen qualified
for Millennium Challenge Account threshold status. This is a
tremendous opportunity for Yemen to use additional resources
to move forward with reform projects that "you determine are
critical" to your own reform efforts. Emphasizing that Yemen
is now at a crucial juncture, U/S said the U.S. has real
concerns about the challenge of corruption in Yemen. Donor
assistance would have a much greater impact, said U/S, if
Yemen addressed its serious corruption problems.
¶6. (C) Qirbi said the ROYG has established an interagency
committee to identify where it is not performing well on MCC
indicators. "The MFA's position," said the FM, "is that MCC
is an opportunity to move beyond rhetoric to truly address
critical issues." He shared his view that reform efforts
must have benchmarks and that line ministries must be held
accountable for implementation. When President Saleh is
informed about acts of corruption, confided Qirbi, the
Government has taken steps to punish these acts in some
ministries. However, he continued, the process of combating
corruption must be institutionalized. U/S agreed, stressing
that MCC requires concrete, tangible progress on this serious
issue.
---------------------------
Qirbi Raises Press Freedoms
---------------------------
¶7. (C) In a likely effort to preempt USG talking points on
deteriorating press freedoms in Yemen, the Foreign Minister
raised the issue himself. "We are facing a challenge with
freedom of the press," said the FM, "but you must understand
our recent history." Qirbi suggested that perhaps the press
law needed amending, but explained that following 1990
unification, hundreds of unregulated media outlets sprung up
in Yemen that focused on north-south divisions instead of
national objectives. Accusing the Yemen Socialist Party
(YSP) press of inciting the 1994 civil war, Qirbi said that
ensuring a "secular, united democratic state," trumps press
freedoms. U/S responded that the U.S. understands the
delicate role of press freedoms in a democracy with national
security problems, but "different points of view do not
threaten a democracy."
¶8. (C) "Press freedoms build the base of a strong democracy,"
U/S told Qirbi. She urged the ROYG to settle the Khaiwani
case, as it is drawing international attention away from the
positive steps Yemen is taking. Moving quickly to amend the
press law, suggested U/S, would be an important step forward.
Qirbi reiterated President Saleh's July 2004 pledge to amend
the press law and outlaw prison sentences for journalists,
but added that Presidential statements "cannot make it happen
over night." Qirbi shared his view that improving press
freedoms in Yemen requires a "huge package" including
education efforts to change ROYG views, particularly among
the security services, and judicial reforms such as training
for court officers. Pointing to the inclusion of media
reform in the ROYG's threshold proposal, U/S suggested
employing MCC assistance to develop and implement such a
strategy.
--------------------------------------------- --------
Palestine, Iraq, and the U.S. Role in Regional Reform
--------------------------------------------- --------
¶9. (C) Moving to the regional context, Qirbi said he was
pleased to see President Bush and Secretary Rice engaged and
moving forward in the peace process. As for Iraq, said the
FM, "we want to see a transition to complete Iraqi
sovereignty as soon as possible. We would like to see the
U.S. role in the region move away from militarism to the
development arena," continued Qirbi, "the road to peace and
stability in the Middle East is through reforms -- democracy
leads to security."
¶10. (C) "Arab leaders are afraid of reforms that diminish
their hold on power and their control of resources," Qirbi
told U/S that the U.S. should encourage Arab government to
engage in reforms "in their own ways, at their own pace,"
lest they feel democracy is being imposed. "In the long
term," responded U/S, "Arab leaders need to realize that it
is to their benefit to establish a partnership with their
people." Qirbi nodded in agreement, saying that President
Saleh has been adept and courageous in forging ahead with
reforms in Yemen despite teething pains. "We are not yet the
democracy we hope to be," he said, "but we are moving in the
right direction."
Khoury