Posted inPolitics & Economics

Canadian export agency downgrades assessment of business ease in Saudi Arabia

Diplomatic feud between the two countries erupted last month after a tweet from Canadian Foreign Minister prompted led Saudi Arabia to expel the Canadian ambassador to Riyadh and freeze new investment

Traffic passes the Kingdom Tower left on King Fahad Road in Riyadh Saudi Arabia on Monday April 9 2012 Saudi Arabias gross domestic product expanded 664 percent in the fourth quarter from a year ago the kingdoms statistics agency said Photographer Waseem ObaidiBloomberg
Traffic passes the Kingdom Tower left on King Fahad Road in Riyadh Saudi Arabia on Monday April 9 2012 Saudi Arabias gross domestic product expanded 664 percent in the fourth quarter from a year ago the kingdoms statistics agency said Photographer Waseem ObaidiBloomberg

Canada’s export financing agency is raising a red flag on doing business with Saudi Arabia in the wake of a feud between Riyadh and the Trudeau government.

Export Development Canada “is currently off cover on all products in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,” the agency said on its website’s Saudi country profile Thursday night. “EDC encourages exporters to exercise caution in shipping to Saudi Arabia.” It said it would continue to monitor the situation and advise customers accordingly.

A diplomatic feud between the two countries erupted last month after a tweet from Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland criticized the arrest in Riyadh of Saudi women’s rights activist Samar Badawi. In response, Saudi Arabia lambasted Canada for interfering in its domestic affairs, expelling the Canadian ambassador to Riyadh and ordering a freeze on new investment.

Before the incident, EDC had rated Saudi Arabia as open for business with a low risk of political interference. It has now put that assessment under review. At the time of Freeland’s tweet, EDC had exposure of about C$2 billion ($1.6 billion) to Saudi Arabia, and about 250 customers operating in the kingdom.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government plans to extend an olive branch to Riyadh, hoping to arrange talks between Freeland and her Saudi counterpart in New York next week during the United Nations General Assembly, according to a Canadian official who spoke to Bloomberg News on condition of anonymity.

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