RIYADH: “Saudi Arabia is healthier because it’s reforming,” Spain’s Foreign Minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya told Arab News.
Gonzalez added that reform is not about inflicting pain, “but about making you stronger,” which Saudi Arabia is moving forward with.
Calling Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 clear in its concept, she said: “It knows where it has to invest, it has to invest in the skills of the people, it needs to invest in infrastructures that will modernize the country, it wants to invest in tourism.
“There is huge potential here and we support all of this, because if Saudi Arabia is stronger it will be good for Saudi Arabia and it’s also going to be good for Spain.”
Gonzalez arrived in Riyadh on Monday and said that she witnessed firsthand the Spanish enterprises investing in Saudi while riding the metro.
“I visited the works of the Riyadh metro. The underground there is a big consortium led by a Spanish company that is responsible for three of the metro lines, so I wanted to see the excellence of the Spanish enterprises investing here in Saudi Arabia. I was very proud of what I saw there.”
#WATCH: #Spain’s foreign minister @AranchaGlezLaya visits the #Riyadh train project and meets her counterpart @FaisalbinFarhan and the Saudi ministers of tourism, investment and trade. @MAECgob @SPAINinKSAhttps://t.co/yntphb9m5N pic.twitter.com/QiXdFPR19f
— Arab News (@arabnews) February 10, 2021
However, not all is well in paradise, as the region is still filled with turmoil. “This neighborhood is a complicated one,” Gonzalez said on the day she was to meet her Saudi counterpart, Prince Faisal bin Farhan.
“There are several factors of instability. There is instability through war in Syria. There is instability in Lebanon, which is having a lot of difficulty in forming a government. There is instability that we do not have yet a peace agreement with Israel and Palestine. There is instability in Yemen, Iraq and Afghanistan.”
Laying out the blueprint of the issues the Middle East is facing, she remarked that instability causes neighboring states to be concerned as friends of those countries.
“We consider ourselves a friend of yours,” she said.
Saudi and Spain enjoy a long history of relations, as do other countries in the region. “Spain has seen the presence of Arabs for so many years — for centuries — and it’s in our gastronomy, its in our language, its in the daily life and in all of the buildings that we see, and these are the deep roots that bind us. Our relations are good but we think they can be better and there is a space and there is a scope.”
As for fighting terrorism, Spain’s commitment is serious and deep, Gonzalez said. “Spain knows very much about this because we have also been the victims of terrorists, both homegrown and foreign.”
However, fighting terrorism comes in many forms, and she emphasized that it should also be fought through the “force of the law and with the force of justice.
“We have to fight against terrorism in all forms, defensively, militarily, through security forces, but also with the force of the law. This part is also important because at the end of the day, for countries like Spain, using the weapons that our democracies have to fight against terror is the best guarantee that we will eradicate terror.”
Gonzalez believes that negotiation is key to resolving major issues, saying that the JCPOA was built on negotiation and should be further enhanced. “Basically, it’s about learning and adjusting.”
She added: “It’s not for me to say exactly where it can be adjusted or how it has to adjusted, but I think there’s a widespread view that we can make it better.”
Iran’s malign acts that target Saudi Arabia through proxy militias is still an ongoing issue. The aggression of Houthi rebels in Yemen was discussed, but Gonzalez remarked that a different strategy was needed.
“I think we have an unresolved issue in Yemen. We have tried to resolve it and Saudi Arabia has been a part of these efforts with some of its neighbors, but I do not think it has worked,” she said.
“I think maybe it’s time to rethink the strategy.
“Maybe it’s time to build a large coalition under the banner of the UN to provide a solution in Yemen with different circumstances,” she added.
The situation in the war-torn country has escalated in recent years, due to constant aggression by Iran-backed Houthis.
Targeting Saudi Arabia with ballistic missiles and preventing humanitarian aid from reaching impoverished Yemenis has not only devastated the country, but also its citizens, making it one of the largest humanitarian crises in the world according to UNICEF.