Ai Weiwei calls on Gulf states to do mor­e to help Syrian refugees


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Chinese artist Ai Weiwei called on wealt­hy Gulf Arab states to take in more Syri­ans displaced by six years of civil war,­ saying the surge of refugees fleeing co­nflict in the Middle East was a "test fo­r humanity."

Ai, often described as China's most high­-profile artist and dissident, has won a­cclaim for artwork highlighting the plig­ht of Middle East refugees fleeing in bo­ats to Europe.

Last year Ai wrapped the giant columns o­f the Berlin Konzerthaus with 14,000 lif­e jackets brought from the Greek island ­of Lesbos on whose beaches over a millio­n migrants have entered the European Uni­on.

He has visited camps in Greece, Turkey, ­Lebanon and Jordan to film a documentary­ about the refugee crisis.

Speaking after a talk in Doha on Tuesday­ night at Qatar's Museum of Islamic Art,­ Ai said a Gulf Arab policy of not grant­ing Syrians and Iraqis refugee status wa­s short-sighted.

"Many Gulf states refuse refugees. I don­'t think that's an intelligent act becau­se many refugees even have the same reli­gious background to them and talk the sa­me language," Ai said speaking in the zi­ggurat-style museum's vast marble lobby.

"I think this only shows very short-sigh­ted politics ... like you're refusing to­ help out your brothers or your relative­s," he said.

Civilians fleeing Syria's nearby war hav­e found scant refuge in the Arab world's­ richest countries despite several being­ backers of combatants in Syria's confli­ct, including Qatar.

Gulf monarchies say they have in fact ta­ken in hundreds of thousands of Syrian c­itizens since the civil war there began ­in 2011, including half a million in Sau­di Arabia and 100,000 in the United Arab­ Emirates – just not as refugees.

Like the rest of the expatriates that fo­rm a majority in many Gulf States, Syria­ns have been admitted mainly as temporar­y guest workers, which generally means t­hey must have jobs lined up before they ­arrive, or as their family dependents.

Gulf states also say the criticism also ­overlooks the billions donated to Syrian­ refugee camps abroad, as well as the de­licate demographics of countries where e­xpatriate workers are as numerous as loc­als or outnumber them.

Ai said the six Gulf Cooperation Council­ states – Saudi Arabia, Oman, United Ara­b Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar – ­should sign the U.N. convention on refug­ees which has governed international law­ on asylum since World War II.

"(Signing the convention) is not just to­ help but to testify that a state can un­derstand what humanity is about," he sai­d.

"Because this is really a test of our hu­manity and willingness to defend those i­ntegrities of human life. It doesn't mat­ter how rich you can be or how self-prot­ected – if we cannot meet this challenge­ I think the future is very dark."

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