Sudan says leader made no promises to Israel’s Netanyahu

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Lieutenant General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan

Sudan’s cabinet said Thursday that the country’s leader General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan had made no promise to Israel’s prime minister of “normalising ties” between the two countries.
Burhan, who heads Sudan’s ruling sovereign council, met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for previously unannounced talks in Entebbe on Monday that appeared to signal an end to Sudan’s long-standing boycott of the Jewish state.
Soon after their meeting, Netanyahu announced that the two leaders had agreed to cooperate towards normalising ties.
Sudan’s transitional cabinet said Thursday that meeting Netanyahu was Burhan’s “personal initiative” and he had made no promises to the Israeli premier.
“The chief of the sovereign council told us … he did not give any commitment and did not talk of normalising relations,” government spokesman Faisal Mohamed Salih told reporters early Thursday.
“He did not give a promise of normalising or having diplomatic relations.”
MANDATE
Salih said the issue of relations with Israel was something the current transitional government was not mandated to decide.
“This government has a very limited mandate. The issue of relations with Israel is beyond its mandate,” he said.
The transitional government headed by Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok was formed months after the ouster of longtime despot Omar al-Bashir amid nationwide protests in April last year.
Burhan heads the ruling sovereign council, a joint civilian and military body tasked with overseeing the country’s transition to civilian rule.
Sudanese top brass have backed Burhan’s initiative in holding the meeting, saying it will help boost national security. The cabinet says it was not informed of the meeting in advance.
WAR
Israel remains technically at war with Sudan, which supported hardline Islamists — including, for a period, Al-Qaeda — during Bashir’s rule.
After their meeting, 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”.
The Palestine Liberation Organization called Burhan and Netanyahu’s meeting “a stab in the back of the Palestinian people”.
Sudan has long been part of a decades-old Arab boycott of Israel over its treatment of the Palestinians and its 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.

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