(COMTEX) B: Russia's Putin in first visit to Egypt since Soviet heyday
( AP WorldStream )
CAIRO, Egypt, Apr 26, 2005 (AP WorldStream via COMTEX) -- Vladimir Putin
arrived here Tuesday on his first visit to the Middle East as Russia's
president, becoming the first Russian or Soviet leader in 40 years to make an
official state visit to Egypt, a one-time close ally of the former Soviet Union.
Topping the agenda of his talks with Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak, to whose
palace he was promptly taken, were efforts to revive the tenuous peace process
between Israel and the Palestinians. Putin will later head to Israel amid hopes
that Moscow can play a larger role in the search for a solution to the stalled
peace process.
Putin and Mubarak will also discuss Iraq, Lebanon and Syria, and proposals to
reform the United Nations, the Russian news agency ITAR-Tass quoted Putin's
foreign policy aide, Sergei Prikhodko, as saying.
In an interview published Monday in the leading Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram,
Putin stressed that his visit to Egypt - his first to an Arab country since he
becoming president in 2000 - aims to bolster ties with a region where the former
Soviet Union once wielded tremendous influence.
"My colleagues and I think we must start direct communications with Arab
countries, starting with Egypt," he said.
"It's obvious that we cannot solve the issues of today's world without taking
into consideration the views and interests of the people of this region," Putin
said.
The last Kremlin chief to make an official state visit to Egypt was Nikita
Khrushchev, who in 1964 inaugurated the first stage in the construction of the
Aswan High Dam - a hugely ambitious project to irrigate arable land which once
supplied up to 80 percent of Egypt's electricity. The dam was partly financed
and built with Soviet help.
But the close ties forged between Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser and Moscow
lapsed after his death in 1970 when the Arab nationalist hero was succeeded by
Anwar Sadat, who set the regional powerhouse on a new pro-American track that
accelerated under Mubarak.
Today, Egypt is the second-largest recipient of U.S aid after Israel, and is
seen as a staunch ally of Washington.
Russia, in turn, has forged stronger ties with Israel, which is home to a large
Russian-speaking population and cooperates closely with Moscow on anti-terrorism
efforts.
But analysts say there is scope for Russia and Egypt to improve relations,
including commercial ties that are currently blossoming.
"The visit to Israel is no doubt more important, but Putin's presence in Egypt
will rekindle enthusiasm about long-lost ties," said Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of
the Russia in Global Affairs quarterly journal.
"Egypt is a key power in the Middle East and Russia is keen to show it has an
important role to play in world affairs," he said by telephone from Moscow.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said Monday that Cairo appreciated
Moscow's efforts to implement the internationally-backed "road map" peace plan,
which both Israel and the Palestinians have accepted, but which has stalled as
both sides failed to carry out their initial obligations.
Russia is one of the four international sponsors of the plan. The others are the
United States, the European Union and the United Nations.
Mubarak has twice visited Russia in recent years, including in May last year.
But Putin had until now concentrated on cultivating ties with the West and
Russia's economically powerful Asian neighbors.
Putin's predecessor, Boris Yeltsin, never held a presidential meeting in Cairo,
but in 1996 attended an international summit in the Egyptian resort of Sharm
el-Sheik.
The Russian leader is scheduled to meet Mubarak in the presidential palace after
his arrival on Tuesday evening.
On Wednesday, the two leaders are slated to hold further talks and Putin, who
will leave for Israel at the end of the day, is also expected to tour the
Pyramids.
The Russian delegation includes top business figures who will hold discussions
in Cairo, with Egyptian industrialists interested in securing access to Russian
technology.
By HENRY MEYER
Associated Press Writer
Copyright 2005 Associated Press, All rights reserved
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