- Title: MAURITANIA: Bulldozers destroy Israeli embassy in Mauritania
- Date: 7th March 2009
- Summary: NOUAKCHOTT, MAURITANIA (MARCH 6, 2009) (REUTERS) BULLDOZER IN FRONT OF THE ISRAEL EMBASSY MAURITANIAN POLICE STANDING IN ROAD TURNING TRAFFIC BACK BULLDOZER DESTROYING SAFETY BARRIERS IN FRONT OF THE ISRAELI EMBASSY BULLDOZER PUTTING RUBBLE INTO A TRUCK POLICEMAN STANDING BY TRUCK VARIOUS OF BULLDOZER DESTROYING BARRIERS VARIOUS EXTERIORS OF ISRAELI EMBASSY POLICEMEN D
- Embargoed: 22nd March 2009 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Mauritania
- Country: Mauritania
- Topics: Crime / Law Enforcement
- Reuters ID: LVADDVZ9BXV7CU1A4PPKD9XGPIWZ
- Story Text: Bulldozers destroyed security barriers around the Israeli embassy in Nouakchott after Mauritania's military junta expelled Israeli diplomats and shut the embassy on Friday (March 6), freezing ties with the Jewish state over its invasion of Gaza.
Mauritania was one of only three Arab countries that had full diplomatic relations with Israel and the closure of the embassy in Nouakchott leaves just Egypt and Jordan.
Mauritania's communications minister said the move was a result of a decision taken at a meeting of Arab leaders in Doha in mid-January following Israel's invasion of Gaza.
Another Mauritanian official said Israeli diplomats had been given 48 hours to leave the northwest African country. Staff were seen leaving the building.
An Israeli Foreign Ministry official who declined to be identified said he could not confirm the expulsion and suggested the timing of the decision could be linked to a planned visit to Nouakchott by Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Gaddafi heads the African Union and is trying to mediate in the political crisis Mauritania has endured since the first democratically elected president was overthrown last August and General Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz took over.
Ousted President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi returned to the capital on Friday for the first time since the coup and was due to fly to Libya to meet Gaddafi.
An official close to junta leader Abdel Aziz said that after the Doha summit, the foreign ministry had sent a letter to the Israeli ambassador advising him to leave.
Abdel Aziz announced the decision to freeze relations at a summit of Arab nations in Doha, Qatar, in January. Qatar said at the time that it would freeze its own relations with Israel, which are at a lower level than full diplomatic ties.
Most other Arab countries also froze Israel's trade missions in their capitals after Israel's offensive in Gaza.
Nouakchott, in common with other cities across the Arab world, saw protests against the Gaza attacks earlier this year. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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