Arab leaders endorse two-state solution, say ready for reconciliation with Israel

Arab leaders said on Wednesday at the end of a one-day summit in Amman that they would be ready to have a historic reconciliation with Israel in return for its withdrawal from land it occupied in the 1967 war.

Leaders and heads of delegations pose for a group picture before the opening ceremony of the 28th Arab League Summit meeting at Dead Sea,

Leaders and heads of delegations pose for a group picture before the opening ceremony of the 28th Arab League Summit meeting at Dead Sea, Source: AAP

A communique read by the secretary general of the Arab League said Arab states would back Palestinian-Israeli peace talks to end the decades-old conflict if it guaranteed the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi met Saudi King Salman on the sidelines of an Arab summit in Jordan on Wednesday to break the ice after months of apparent tensions between the allies.

The meeting, in which Salman invited Sisi to visit Saudi Arabia, came days after Egypt announced Saudi energy giant Aramco resumed delivering shipments of petroleum products after abruptly suspending them last October.

Salman and Sisi are among 15 leaders attending the Arab League summit in Sweimeh on the Dead Sea coast to discuss regional conflicts.

Watch: Arab leaders meet at a summit in Amman.



Aramco had halted agreed monthly deliveries of 700,000 tonnes of petroleum products without explanation.

The move was announced after Egypt voted in favour of a Russian-drafted UN Security Council resolution on Syria that Saudi Arabia strongly opposed.

An agreement to hand over to Saudi Arabia two Red Sea islands in the Straits of Tiran, signed during a visit by Salman to Cairo last April, had also foundered on a court ruling that blocked the move.

An Egyptian presidency statement said the two leaders "stressed the importance of pushing forward and developing bilateral relations in all fields" in Wednesday's meeting.

"King Salman invited the president to an official visit to the kingdom, which was welcomed by" Sisi, the presidency said, adding that Sisi also invited Salman to visit Cairo.

Saudi Arabia supported Egypt with billions of dollars in aid after Sisi, who was the army chief, toppled Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in 2013.

Saudi Arabia views the political Islamism of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood with suspicion.


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2 min read
Published 30 March 2017 11:04am
Updated 30 March 2017 11:08am


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