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Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Shaikh Sabah Khalid Al Sabah (R) and his Qatari counterpart Khalid Al Attiyah pose for a photograph after signing agreements between their countries on April 23, 2014 at the foreign ministry in Kuwait City. Attiyah said a dispute with three other Gulf states, which pulled their envoys from Doha last month, "is over," insisting that his country made no concessions. Image Credit: AFP

Kuwait City: Qatar’s disagreement with three fellow Gulf states, which withdrew their envoys from Doha last month, is “over”, the Qatari foreign minister said on Wednesday, while insisting his country had made no concessions.

“The statement issued in Riyadh on April 17 was clear ... For the brothers in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) the dispute is over,” Khalid Al Attiyah told a press conference in Kuwait after a meeting with his Kuwaiti counterpart Shaikh Sabah Khalid Al Sabah.

GCC foreign ministers met last week and announced an end to months of unprecedented tensions between Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain.

The three countries recalled their ambassadors from Doha after accusing Qatar of meddling in their internal affairs and supporting the banned Muslim Brotherhood.

Al Attiyah’s statement was the first Qatari comment on the special ministerial meeting held in Saudi Arabia.

“Brothers in the GCC states arrived at understandings which are not considered to be concessions by any party,” the Qatari minister said.

Al Attiyah said it is now “left for the brothers in the GCC states to send their ambassadors back” to Doha.

A statement attributed to Saudi Arabia that the three ambassadors would not return until Doha started to implement the agreement was “inaccurate”, he said.

At the meeting in Riyadh, the ministers agreed that the policies of GCC member states should not undermine each other’s “interests, security and stability”.

Kuwait and Oman also belong to the six-nation GCC.

Al Attiyah declined to provide details on the Riyadh agreement but reiterated that it signalled an end to the “differences in opinion”.