Times of Suriname

Netanyahu says Israel and Sudan to normalise ties soon

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UGANDA Israel and Sudan have agreed to move towards forging normal relations for the first time, Israeli officials said, after the leaders of the two countries met in Uganda.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held talks with Abdel Fattah alBurhan, head of Sudan’s sovereign council, in Entebbe. “It was agreed to start cooperatio­n leading to normalisat­ion of the relationsh­ip between the two countries,” an Israeli statement said. “We agreed to begin cooperatio­n that will lead to normalisat­ion of relations between the two countries,” Netanyahu tweeted. “History!”

However, in response to Al Jazeera’s request for comment, Sudan’s Foreign Minister Asmaa Mohammed Abdullah said she had learned of the Monday meeting through media outlets and had no further informatio­n. Sudan’s informatio­n minister and government spokesman, Faisal Salih, also told Reuters news agency he had no informatio­n about the visit to Uganda and that the cabinet had not discussed it. Officials would wait for “clarificat­ions” on Burhan’s return, Salih said in a later statement.

A senior Palestinia­n official denounced Monday’s meeting as a “stab in the back of the Palestinia­n people”.

This was also a “stark departure from the Arab peace initiative at a time when the administra­tion of (US) President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu are trying to liquidate the Palestinia­n cause,” Saeb Erekat, secretaryg­eneral of the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on (PLO), said in a statement carried by official news agency WAFA.

Normalisin­g relations with Sudan, where Arab states gathered in 1967 to issue what became known as the “Three No’s” no recognitio­n of Israel, no peace with Israel and no negotiatio­ns with Israel would allow Netanyahu to burnish his diplomatic credential­s a month before the country’s March 2 election. “Netanyahu believes that Sudan is moving in a new and positive direction,” the Israeli statement said. Sudan’s leader, it added, “is interested in helping his country go through a modernisat­ion process by removing it from isolation and placing it on the world map”.

The Associated Press news agency quoted a Sudanese military official as saying the meeting was coordinate­d by the United Arab Emirates and also aimed at removing Sudan from the US’s list of “state sponsors of terrorism”.

In January 2016, Sudan’s former Foreign Minister Ibrahim Ghandoor had said normalisin­g relations with Israel would be possible in exchange for the lifting of US sanctions on his country. Israel previously considered Sudan a security threat, due to Iran’s suspected use of the country as a conduit for overland smuggling of munitions to the occupied Gaza Strip. In 2009, regional sources said, Israeli aircraft bombed an arms convoy in Sudan.

However, since Sudan’s longtime ruler Omar alBashir was removed from office last year, Khartoum has distanced itself from Iran and no longer poses such a threat, Israeli officials say. (Al Jazeera)

 ??  ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni held talks in Entebbe, Uganda (Photo: Weekly Reviewer)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni held talks in Entebbe, Uganda (Photo: Weekly Reviewer)

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