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Egypt invites Turkish FM to Gaza conference in Cairo

Türkiye Materials 20 September 2014 02:46 (UTC +04:00)

Egypt has invited Turkey to a donors' conference for the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, after months of strained relations between the two countries, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

The meeting, initiated by Egypt and Norway, will be at the level of foreign ministers; an invitation to the conference was recently extended by the Egyptian Embassy in Ankara to the Turkish Foreign Ministry.

A Foreign Ministry official told the Hurriyet Daily News that Turkey, in principle, had decided to attend the gathering, but the level of participation has yet to be decided.

If Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavushoglu participates in the meeting in Cairo on Oct. 12, it will be a breakthrough in ties, as no high-level visit has been paid between Turkey and Egypt since relations deteriorated when the Egyptian military toppled President Mohamed Morsi in 2013.

Egypt and Turkey reciprocally declared their respective ambassadors as personae non gratae and reduced the level of diplomatic representation in 2013.

Earlier, minor attempts to restore bilateral ties were hampered due to public statements by political leaders. Recently, the Turkish government invited the Egyptian embassy's chargé d'affaires in Ankara, Hussein el-Saharty, to both the inauguration ceremony of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the annual Victory Day reception. El-Saharty participated in the inauguration ceremony on Aug. 28, but after Erdogan's criticism of his country in an interview to Al-Jazeera, el-Saharty did not attend the Victory Day reception on Aug. 30.

Turkish-Arab League Forum in limbo for two years

The deterioration between Ankara and Cairo has also had repercussions on Turkey's relations with the Arab League, as the Turkish-Arab Cooperation Forum, a political venue that aims to strengthen cooperation between Turkey and Arab League countries, has been left in limbo for two years.

No Arab country has offered to host the meeting so far due to tense relations between Ankara and Cairo, where the headquarters of the Arab League is based. This year, the current prime minister and then-foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, attempted to revive the forum but without success.

Meanwhile, two weeks ago, the secretary-general of the Arab League, a former Egyptian diplomat, congratulated Davutoglu on acceding to his new post.

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