Sowetan

Islamic leaders to meet with Trump

US president to visit Saudi Arabia

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Riyadh – King Abdullah II of Jordan, Algerian president Abdelaziz Bouteflika and Niger’s Mahamadou Issoufou are among leaders invited by Saudi King Salman bin Abdulazi al-Saud for a summit with United States president Donald Trump.

The Arab-Islamic-American Summit will be among a series of talks expected to be held in Riyadh on May 20-21, Saudi officials said.

Trump has frequently been accused of fuelling Islamophob­ia, but aides described his decision to visit Saudi Arabia as an effort to reset relations with the Muslim world.

There will also be a separate meeting between monarchs of the six-nation Gulf Cooperatio­n Council and Trump, as well as bilateral talks between the Saudi and US leaders, Riyadh’s foreign minister Adel alJubeir has said.

In addition to heads of state from Jordan, Algeria and Niger, the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA) reported that Salman asked Yemeni president Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi and Morocco’s King Mohammed VI to attend.

The leaders of Turkey, Pakistan, Iraq and Tunisia have also received invitation­s, the Arab News daily reported yesterday.

Saudi Arabia – which is home to Islam’s holiest sites – will be Trump’s first foreign stop since becoming president in January.

“It is a clear message to the world that the United States and the Arab and Islamic countries can form a partnershi­p,” Jubeir said in Washington, according to SPA.

“We believe that it will strengthen cooperatio­n between the United States and Arab and Islamic countries in the fight against terrorism and extremism, and the visit will have enormous benefits for the region and the world.”

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