They "totally reject and condemn these statements" and underline that their initiative, under which Yemen President Ali Abdullah Saleh would resign, was the work of the "joint will of GCC states".
Saleh said in an interview with the Russia Today television channel earlier that, "Contacts are under way for the signing of the agreement on Monday in Riyadh, but we have reservations about some mediators involved in a conspiracy".
He singled out Qatar among the six-nation GCC and accused it of causing unrest in Yemen where more than 145 people have been killed in the past three months as protesters demand the immediate ouster of Saleh.
"The state of Qatar is funding chaos in Yemen and in Egypt and Syria and throughout the Arab world, " he charged.
"We reserve the right not to sign if the representatives of Qatar are present" at the ceremony, Saleh warned.
The foreign ministers of the GCC -- Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates -- met in Riyadh on Sunday to finalise the Yemen transition deal before presenting it to the parties for ratification.
The plan proposes the formation in Sanaa of a government of national unity, Saleh transferring power to his vice president and an end to the deadly protests rocking the impoverished Arabian Peninsula nation since late January.
The president would submit his resignation to parliament within 30 days, to be followed two months later by a presidential election.
However, a defiant Saleh, who has been in power for 32 years, has publicly insisted on sticking to the constitution in any transfer of power, even though his ruling General People's Congress party has said it accepts the GCC plan.
The Gulf Cooperation Council head is to return to Sanaa to renew mediation efforts aimed at ending the three-month-old political crisis in Yemen, the organisation announced earlier Sunday.
The GCC "hopes to remove all the obstacles still standing in the path of achieving a final agreement," the six-nation grouping said after the meeting in the Saudi capital.
Secretary General Abdullatif al-Zayani is to "go back to Sanaa with this aim," it added.
Zayani had left the Yemeni capital on Saturday after failing to get Saleh to sign the pact in his capacity as president, prompting the opposition to call off their plan to send a delegation to Riyadh.
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Saleh said in an interview with the Russia Today television channel earlier that, "Contacts are under way for the signing of the agreement on Monday in Riyadh, but we have reservations about some mediators involved in a conspiracy".
He singled out Qatar among the six-nation GCC and accused it of causing unrest in Yemen where more than 145 people have been killed in the past three months as protesters demand the immediate ouster of Saleh.
"The state of Qatar is funding chaos in Yemen and in Egypt and Syria and throughout the Arab world, " he charged.
"We reserve the right not to sign if the representatives of Qatar are present" at the ceremony, Saleh warned.
The foreign ministers of the GCC -- Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates -- met in Riyadh on Sunday to finalise the Yemen transition deal before presenting it to the parties for ratification.
The plan proposes the formation in Sanaa of a government of national unity, Saleh transferring power to his vice president and an end to the deadly protests rocking the impoverished Arabian Peninsula nation since late January.
The president would submit his resignation to parliament within 30 days, to be followed two months later by a presidential election.
However, a defiant Saleh, who has been in power for 32 years, has publicly insisted on sticking to the constitution in any transfer of power, even though his ruling General People's Congress party has said it accepts the GCC plan.
The Gulf Cooperation Council head is to return to Sanaa to renew mediation efforts aimed at ending the three-month-old political crisis in Yemen, the organisation announced earlier Sunday.
The GCC "hopes to remove all the obstacles still standing in the path of achieving a final agreement," the six-nation grouping said after the meeting in the Saudi capital.
Secretary General Abdullatif al-Zayani is to "go back to Sanaa with this aim," it added.
Zayani had left the Yemeni capital on Saturday after failing to get Saleh to sign the pact in his capacity as president, prompting the opposition to call off their plan to send a delegation to Riyadh.
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