Israel and Sudan finalize text of peace agreement, says Israeli foreign minister
Israel and Sudan have finalized the text of a peace agreement to be signed “later this year,” Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen announced on Thursday.
Speaking upon returning to Tel
Aviv from a visit to Sudan’s capital Khartoum, Cohen said the trip was made
with the consent of the United States, and that a signing ceremony is expected
to take place in Washington “after the transfer of power in Sudan to a civilian
government that will be established as part of the ongoing transition process
in the country.”
Cohen emphasized the symbolism of a peace deal between Israel and Khartoum
as he announced the breakthrough.
“Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, is remembered in Israel as the city where
the Arab countries decided on the historic ‘Three Nos’: no peace with Israel,
no negotiations with Israel, and no recognition of Israel. We are building a
new reality with the Sudanese, in which the ‘Three Nos’ will become the ‘Three
Yesses’: yes to negotiations between Israel and Sudan, yes to recognition of
Israel and yes to peace between the states and between the peoples,” he said.
Sudan was part of the original Abraham Accord normalization agreements between Israel and the UAE, Bahrain and Morocco brokered by the administration of former US President Donald Trump. But after a military coup in Sudan in October 2021, the final steps of the process with Khartoum were stalled.
During the visit, Cohen met with the leader of Sudan’s ruling Sovereign Council, General Abdel Fatah al-Burhan, and with senior officials, and discussed with them the steps towards the signing of the peace agreement between Israel and Sudan in the near future, the Foreign Ministry said.
He told a press conference on Thursday that the visit to Sudan laid “the foundations for a historic peace agreement with a strategic Arab and Muslim country.
The peace agreement between Israel and Sudan will promote regional stability and contribute to the national security of the State of Israel.”
He added that the signing would “serve as an opportunity for the establishment of relations with other countries in Africa as well as the strengthening of existing ties with African countries.
The relationship of African countries with Israel is a common interest both for us and for the countries of the continent.”
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