Arab Times

Netanyahu woos West African leaders

Morocco king skips summit

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MONROVIA, June 5, (Agencies): Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday joined West African leaders at a summit in Liberia, where they hailed peacekeepi­ng efforts in the region but warned about threats to stability.

Netanyahu, who had visited east Africa in July 2016, vowed that they had “no better partner” than his country after he was received by Liberian President and outgoing head of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

Netanyahu and Senegalese President Macky Sall later announced the normalisat­ion of diplomatic relations between their two countries, following a spat over a UN resolution demanding Israel halt expansion of settlement­s in the occupied West Bank.

After the motion in December, pushed by Senegal and New Zealand, Israel recalled its ambassador­s to both nations and cancelled an aid programme in Senegal.

“The two leaders announced an end to the crisis between their countries,” a statement from the Israeli prime minister’s office said.

ECOWAS also announced it had in principle approved Morocco’s request to join the group, despite Moroccan King Mohamed VI refusing to attend the summit due to the presence of Netanyahu, according to Rabat’s foreign ministry.

Sirleaf hailed the contributi­on of ECOWAS forces in restoring peace in her country, wracked by a bloody civil war from 1989-2003.

“This marks a turning point in the post-conflict recovery in the reconstruc­tion of our country,” she said. “Many ECOWAS citizens made the ultimate sacrifice with their lives for the uninterrup­ted peace we continue to enjoy. But she warned: “Today, terrorist attacks are endangerin­g the stability in our regions.”

On Saturday a Gambian protester died of gunshot wounds after being shot as supporters of former Gambian leader Yahya Jammeh clashed with ECOWAS forces, deployed in the country since January.

BEIJING:

Also:

Zambia has detained 31 Chinese nationals for illegal mining in the African country’s copper belt but has failed to provide strong proof of their crimes, a senior Chinese diplomat said as he lodged a complaint.

Lin Songtian, the Chinese Foreign Ministry’s director-general for African affairs, told a Zambian diplomat in Beijing that China understood and supported actions to crack down on illegal mining, the ministry said in a statement late on Sunday.

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