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| Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he and the Sudanese leader "agreed to start cooperating leading to normalisation" after decades of boycott (AFP Photo/SUMY SADURNI) |
Khartoum
(AFP) - Sudan's military announced Wednesday it backed a surprise meeting held
between the country's leader and Israel's premier in Uganda this week, saying
the opening would help boost national security.
General
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, chairman of Sudan's ruling sovereign council, met
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Entebbe on Monday in a meeting
that was not pre-announced.
Israel
remains technically at war with Sudan, which supported hardline Islamists -- including,
for a period, Al-Qaeda -- during the rule of autocrat Omar al-Bashir, who was
ousted during mass protests last year.
On Tuesday,
Burhan briefed the sovereign council and key ministers about his meeting,
saying he met Netanyahu "to protect the national security of Sudan".
The
military's support for Burhan on the matter came after top officers met at army
headquarters in Khartoum.
"There
was a meeting at the army headquarters today, and those present... were briefed
about the visit ... and its impact on Sudan's national security," military
spokesman Brigadier Amir Mohamed Al-Hassan told AFP.
"The
army is in favour of this (Burhan-Netanyahu) meeting as it is in the interest
of Sudan's national security."
On
Wednesday, Burhan met Sudanese editors to explain why he met Israel's premier.
Burhan told
the editors "the main thing that pushed him to take the decision to meet
... (Netanyahu) was to secure some key benefits for Sudan," said Hassan,
without elaborating.
"He
said that brave decisions were needed in order to change the current situation
in Sudan, to ease the economic pressures on Sudanese people, and also to change
the internal and foreign policies of Sudan."
'Positive
direction'
Soon after
Monday's meeting in Entebbe, Netanyahu's office said the Israeli premier
believed that post-Bashir Sudan was headed "in a positive direction".
It said he
and Burhan had "agreed to start cooperation leading to normalisation of
the relationship between the two countries".
Sudan has
long been part of a decades-old official Arab boycott of Israel over its
treatment of the Palestinians and occupation of Arab lands.
In the wake
of the Six-Day War of 1967 in which Israel occupied the Palestinian territories
and seized the Golan Heights from Syria, Arab leaders held a historic meeting
in Khartoum to announce what became known as the 'three nos' -- no peace, no
recognition, no negotiations with Israel.
The
Palestine Liberation Organization called Burhan and Netanyahu's meeting "a
stab in the back of the Palestinian people".
In a
statement carried on official news agency WAFA, Palestinian chief negotiator
Saeb Erekat accused Netanyahu and his US allies of "trying to liquidate
the Palestinian cause".
Bashir was
ousted by the army last April after months of nationwide protests against his
iron fisted three-decade rule.
Sudan is
now ruled by a joint military-civilian sovereign council headed by Burhan,
which is tasked with overseeing the country's transition to full civilian rule.

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