Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

Cairo - Jeddah.. The Reunion Summit


Sat 20 May 2023 | 03:01 PM
Elham Aboul Fateh
Elham Aboul Fateh
Elham Aboul Fateh

Now I can say that the Arab summit that kicked off in Jeddah is the summit of the new beginning and hope.

After the "Arab-Arab" decision issued from Cairo regarding the return of Syria to the Arab League, and the consensus of the leaders to welcome its return and the presence of President Bashar heading the Syrian delegation..I felt that Cairo represents the start of the Arab awakening that appeared during the Jeddah Summit headed by Prince Muhammad bin Salman, the Saudi Crown Prince. The axis of this sumit is that the Arabs take over their issues and could have the strength and pressure cards to implement what happened in terms of the return of Syria despite the objection of some international forces on other issues such as the Palestinian cause and the implementation of the Arab initiative that was put forward twenty years ago, or Arab action and joint economic cooperation and assistance to the parties in Libya, Yemen, Sudan, Tunisia and Iraq to uphold the unity and cohesion of the national state. 

This was confirmed by the wise, calm and patriotic appeal of President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi when he said, "The region is going through difficult circumstances that need decisive solutions and common positions, stressing that preservingthe national state and supporting its institutions is a necessity for the future of peoples and their capabilities. 

President El-Sisi's bet on joint Arab action is consistent with Egypt's responsibilities and its Arab affiliation since the founding of the League in Cairo nearly 80 years ago. God granted Egypt an honest army and a leader who put our compass back on track, and believes that the interests of Egypt and its Arab nation lie in relying on our joint efforts to deal with global crises and coordinate our work to reform the global economic governance system including Financing institutions that should be more responsive to the challenges of the developing world and that the state of international polarization has become a threat to the “globalization” system, which is also consistent with what Tunisian President Kais Said demanded when he said that the world that is being formed today after the illusion of globalization should not be formed at the expense of our nation, and President Bashar al-Assad considered it an opportunity to rearrange our affairs away from the foreign interference. 

I hope to follow up on the implementation of the summit's decisions that set a practical and implementable plan, and I also hope that Sudan will be a priority before it's too late!