KHARTOUM: Egypt’s President Mohammed Mursi arrived in neighbouring Sudan yesterday to push economic and other ties on a visit Khartoum calls “historic” but which comes nearly a year after Mursi’s election.
The two-day trip is the former Muslim Brotherhood leader’s first to Sudan, which Egypt jointly ruled with Britain until 1956.
Mursi assumed office last June after a popular uprising toppled long-time president Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
The Egyptian leader is to hold talks with President Omar Hassan Al Bashir, a fellow Islamist, as well as with business people and political party leaders. Posters of the two leaders have been hung on street corners.
“It is a historic visit because of the strategic depth of the relations between the people of the two countries, and both leaders are elected,” Emad Sayed Ahmed, Bashir’s press secretary, told AFP.
Mursi’s office said the visit has “particular importance because it is the first of its kind since the president took office, and is aimed at stressing the special and strong strategic relationship between Egypt and Sudan.”
Cairo is keen to establish “a real economic partnership with Sudan, to meet the ambitions and goals of growth and prosperity for both peoples,” the Egyptian statement said ahead of the visit.
Sudan is an important ally for Egypt in terms of its agricultural potential and in Cairo’s efforts to secure an acceptable agreement with upstream river Nile countries on vital water supplies.
Two years ago, Egypt’s then prime minister Essam Sharaf said his country was the third largest investor in Sudan. But University of Khartoum political scientist Safwat Fanous said Mursi’s trip “comes too late,” after he visited several other countries including India and Pakistan. “Sudan is very important to Egypt, has been and will be in the future, for many reasons” including historical factors, the resources of the Nile river, and close ties between the two peoples, Fanous said. AFP