The EU strengthens bonds with Gulf States
The European Commission has entered into a research project agreement
with the Gulf Research Center (GRC) think tank targeting stronger
relations and supporting the policy-making process between the EU and
the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). This is the first agreement of its
kind to be signed between the two regional blocs.
'The research project has been titled as "EU-GCC Al-Jisr Project
for Public Diplomacy and Outreach" which will focus mainly on the EU
and GCC-EU relations,' said Abdulaziz Sager, a Saudi businessman, who
is the founder and Chairman of the Dubai-based GRC, an independent
research institute.
The Al-Jisr project will run for a period of two years and its
objectives are three-fold. The first aim is to improve both the general
public's knowledge as well as the professional's knowledge for
understanding the European Union, its people, policies and
institutions. Its second aim is to encourage dialogue and debate
regarding EU-GCC relations and contribute to the future of
policy-making between the two regions. Lastly, closer ties between the
two will be fostered through the dissemination of information on the
EU.
The project will consist of five key components including training
and workshop activities, and the translation of key textbooks on the EU
into Arabic. Ultimately, a project website portal will be created and
used for the dissemination of information about the GCC.
According to the creators of the project, improving relations
between the two blocs is critical for the future, especially when one
considers the increasing inter-dependence between the EU and GCC in
different sectors including, among others, defence, oil, commerce,
science and culture.
Despite this inter-dependence, however, the 40 million inhabitants
of the six Gulf States have little knowledge of European life and its
institutions. Therefore, this project is an important step towards
rectifying this situation. 'This was an important step to further
GCC-EU relations and that with the project announcement, the European
Commission has provided a strong signal to explore areas that will be
mutually beneficial for both sides,' commented Mr Sager.
Besides GRC, 'the project is composed and promoted by a consortium
of both Gulf-based and European institutions including the Riyadh-based
Institute of Diplomatic Studies (IDS), which works under the Saudi
Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and the Belgium-based Center for European
Policy Studies', he added. ''We now look forward to engaging in the
various activities and to provide a real contribution to the
enhancement of relations.'
The GCC comprises the Persian Gulf States of Bahrain, Kuwait,
Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. It is expected
that Yemen will also enter the GCC by 2016. Together with Yemen, the
GRC has joined the Greater Arab Free Trade Area (GAFTA), an
organisation similar to the early stages of the EU.
Several other institutions, which will be associated with this
research project, are: the European Institute for Asian Studies
(Belgium), the Arab Reform Initiative (France), Sciences Po (France),
the Bertelsmann Foundation (Germany), the National Technical University
of Athens (Greece), the Istituto Affari Internazionale (Italy), Kuwait
University (Kuwait), and the Fundacion para la Relaciones
Internacionales y el Dialogo Exterior, (FRIDE of Spain).
Source: Community R&D Information Service (CORDIS)
