Morsy, Saudis in bid for new start Focus on stability

JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia, July 12, (Agencies): Saudi Arabia gave a lavish reception to Egyptian President Mohamed Morsy on Thursday, a gesture analysts said indicated the Arab world’s wealthiest country was ready to put old tensions behind it to do business with the new Islamist president.
In his first official foreign visit since his election in June, Morsy, who belonged to Egypt’s influential Muslim Brotherhood movement which had long had strained ties with Saudi Arabia, arrived in Jeddah late on Wednesday.
Morsy said he and King Abdullah, in a meeting late on Wednesday, held “fruitful” talks focused on regional stability, according to the official SPA news agency.
Our discussions were “fruitful and constructive and in the interest of Egypt, of Saudi Arabia and of the people of the region,” Morsy told reporters in the Red Sea city of Jeddah after the meeting.
“Everything (King Abdul-lah) said was in the interest of the future, of the region and of Egypt,” he said, adding that the king spoke with “wisdom and knowledge and love for the Egyptian people.”
Saudi media said on Thursday that Crown Prince Salman and a host of other royal family members were at the airport to greet Morsy upon his arrival in Jeddah, the summer seat of the Saudi government, before he was driven to a meeting and dinner with King Abdullah late on Wednesday.
Saudi Arabia enjoyed strong ties with former president Hosni Mubarak, who was toppled last year by a popular uprising that propelled Morsy’s Muslim Brotherhood to the top political spot in the Arab world’s most populous country.
The Brotherhood and Saudi Arabia share Sunni Muslim values, but Riyadh regards the movement as an ideological rival with an aggressively activist political doctrine that might destabilise allies and foment discord inside the kingdom.
Yet Morsy’s election left Saudi Arabia with little option other than to try to extend its hand to the new president.
Saudi analysts said the reception King Abdullah prepared for Morsy showed the kingdom was willing to start a new era in relations with the Muslim Brotherhood.
“The message is that we have no problem with the revolution or the Brotherhood and let’s continue with the well-established Saudi-Egyptian relationship,” said Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi analyst.
Hussein Shobokshi, another Saudi commentator, said: “Through this visit Saudi Arabia has made it very clear and obvious that it is over the Mubarak era and that it has started a new chapter with the new leader of Egypt.”
Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, has pledged $2.7 billion to support Egypt’s battered finances after the uprising that toppled Mubarak.
But relations nosedived in April when Riyadh briefly recalled it ambassador to Cairo, Ahmed al-Qattan, after protests outside the embassy over the arrest of an Egyptian lawyer in the kingdom.
Egyptian parliament members, including senior Muslim Brotherhood figures, travelled to Saudi Arabia to defuse tensions.
Saudi Arabia took the first step towards building new ties with Egypt. Qattan said earlier this month that King Abdullah had extended an invitation to Morsy to visit Saudi Arabia.
Saudi media said the talks centred on “major regional and international issues, including ways to contain the Syrian crisis”, but revealed few details.
Saudi Arabia has been a major supporter of Syrian rebels trying to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad. Morsy has said that Egypt would work to end bloodshed in Syria.
Saudi media said that Morsy’s visit was a recognition by Egypt of Saudi Arabia’s regional weight.
“By choosing the kingdom for his first visit abroad, ... Morsy recognises that the two countries are the pillars of Arab national security,” the deputy editor of Saudi Arabia’s al-Riyadh newspaper, Yousuf Al Kuwailet, wrote in a column.
The Arabic language al-Watan daily said that Morsy’s visit was a signal that Saudi Arabia and Egypt were ready to work together on critical regional issues, such as Syria.
“The Saudi and Egyptian leadership greatly realise the importance of tidying up the ‘geo-political house’ of the region and to prepare things for a new Syria,” Yasir ba Amer wrote in al-Watan.
Morsy was due to make a minor pilgrimage to the Muslim holy city of Makkah  on Thursday and to meet members of the Egyptian community in Jeddah before returning home.

Read By: 2387
Comments: 0
Rated:

Comments
You must login to add comments ...
 Existing Member Login      
Username
(Your Email Address)
Password
 
 
   Not a member yet ?
   Forgot Password ?

About Us   |   RSS   |   Contact Us   |   Feedback   |   Advertise With Us