
Cairo: President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has a
sincere desire to take the Egypt-India ties to a higher level,
Minister of State for External Affairs M J Akbar has said.
Akbar, who called on President Sisi here yesterday,
described his meeting with the Egyptian leader as "excellent".
"President Sisi's great desire for taking our
relationship, which is already very good, to much higher level
is very sincere and is a very powerful pillar of our bilateral
relations and it gives us hope for great revival," he told PTI
after the meeting.
During the meeting at Al Alamein, the two leaders
discussed ways to further strengthen the bilateral ties as
well as other regional and international issues.
Akbar said both countries always find new avenues for
partnership and cooperation "not simply on government-to-
government level but how to improve partnership on a people-
to-people level".
He handed over President Sisi a letter from Prime
Minister Narendra Modi. The letter was to thank Egypt for its
support to the Indian candidate at the International Court of
Justice, the minister said.
"This is a message of renewal relations and it also
elaborate how we can work together both in multilateral and
bilateral issues," he said, noting that India had supported
the Egyptian candidate for the Secretary-General of UNESCO.
The minister also mentioned that President Sisi and Prime
Minister Modi have met four times and they have developed a
"very good warm friendship".
Sisi had visited India in September 2016.
Akbar also condemned the killing of Egyptian policemen in
a gun battle with terrorists during a raid on a militant
hideout in Giza governorate on Friday.
"It was also an occasion to reassert what our Prime
Minister has been saying about terrorism and the message he is
giving is 'There is no good terrorism, no bad terrorism. All
terrorism is evil' and President Sisi endorsed that
completely," he said.
Akbar also praised the vital role which Egypt plays in
the Middle East.
"Egypt has always played a very important, even critical,
role in shaping the Middle East. It is one of the countries
which make the difference," he said.
During his short visit to Egypt, Akbar laid a wreath at
Indian soldiers cemetery at Alamein and remembered their
valiant sacrifices in the World War II.
Akbar's visit coincides with the 75th anniversary of the
historic battle of El-Alamein.
The decisive battle - which began on October 23, 1942 -
pitched the forces of British Field Marshal Bernard
Montgomery's against the Afrika Korps of Germany's Erwin
Rommel.
The battle was a major turning point in the war, halting
the advance of the Axis in North Africa and paving the way for
the final victory there the following year.