Kuwait Times

Israel cabinet minister invited to High-tech conference in Bahrain

Israel in diplomatic push for Gulf ties

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JERUSALEM: An Israeli cabinet minister said yesterday he had been invited to attend a conference next year in Bahrain, in what he described as part of Israel’s emerging relations with Arab and Muslim countries that do not formally recognize it. Israel’s diplomatic push in the Gulf, where it sees Arab states as its natural allies against regional powerhouse Iran, has become increasing­ly public after years of covert contacts.

Shared worries about Iran or needs in terms of security, agricultur­e and water have thawed hostility toward Israel among some Arab government­s. After a surprise trip to Oman last month, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday hosted a first visit by Chadian President Idriss Deby. “I myself received a personal invitation to Bahrain,” Israeli Economy Minister Eli Cohen said in a radio interview.

Cohen told Army Radio the invitation was to a conference in the first quarter of 2019 “in the realm of technology and hightech, in which the State of Israel is certainly a leader”. He did not say whether he planned to attend. Asked to elaborate, an Israeli official briefed on Cohen’s affairs said the event to which he had been invited was the Startup Nations Ministeria­l conference on April 15, a forum for public policymake­rs to discuss how to promote entreprene­urs. The official, who requested anonymity given the sensitivit­y of the matter, said the invitation originated with the Manama government and was relayed to Israel by Switzerlan­d.

Palestinia­n shot dead Officials in Manama did not immediatel­y respond to a Reuters request for comment. Switzerlan­d’s ambassador to Israel, JeanDaniel Ruch, said in an emailed statement that his embassy had no knowledge of any such invitation. Bahrain, where a Saudibacke­d Sunni Muslim ruling family faces a Shia-led opposition, is one of several flashpoint­s in a regional tussle for influence between Saudi Arabia and Iran. Manama is a close ally of the Saudis and Emiratis, Gulf forces that Israel has described as potential partners against its arch-foe Iran. In another developmen­t, a Palestinia­n man rammed his car into three Israeli soldiers in the occupied West Bank yesterday before being shot dead by another soldier, the army and Palestinia­n medics said. The Palestinia­n was pronounced dead by medics at the site, the Palestinia­n Red Crescent said. The soldiers were lightly wounded and evacuated in stable conditions from the scene north of Hebron, according to the Israeli army.

A Red Crescent spokesman said that Israeli soldiers took the body of the Palestinia­n, whose name has yet to be released, from their ambulance to an Israeli army vehicle. According to the army, the wounded soldiers had been “performing engineerin­g work on a route between Beit Ummar and Al Arroub” in the southern West Bank. A “soldier on patrol fired towards the terrorist and neutralize­d him,” the army said in a statement. A wave of attacks against Israelis by lone-wolf Palestinia­n assailants erupted in 2015 including stabbings and the use of cars to ram people - but such acts have since become sporadic.

 ?? —AFP ?? BAYT UMMAR: Israeli police investigat­e in a cordoned area around a damaged car at the scene of an attack where a Palestinia­n man rammed a vehicle into three Israeli soldiers yesterday.
—AFP BAYT UMMAR: Israeli police investigat­e in a cordoned area around a damaged car at the scene of an attack where a Palestinia­n man rammed a vehicle into three Israeli soldiers yesterday.

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