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Turkish FM will travel to Cairo in August to discuss Sisi’s visit to Ankara

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Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan announced plans to visit Cairo in early August to prepare for Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi’s upcoming visit to Ankara, in an interview with Sky News Arabia on Wednesday.

The visit aims to strengthen diplomatic ties between Turkey and Egypt, which have seen significant improvement in recent years.

Fidan revealed that during his visit, he will meet with his new Egyptian counterpart to finalize arrangements for the meeting between President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and President Sisi. The leaders are expected to discuss regional security, economic cooperation and other bilateral issues. This high-level engagement marks a continuation of efforts to rebuild relations after a decade of strained ties.

Erdoğan has abandoned his years of harsh criticism and extended an olive branch to Sisi, marking a significant turning point in diplomatic relations between Turkey and Egypt.

Erdoğan, who once labeled Sisi a “murderer, oppressor and putschist” for his role in the 2013 military coup that ousted the Muslim Brotherhood from power in Egypt, called Sisi “my brother” during his visit to Cairo after an 11-year hiatus.

This diplomatic U-turn comes after a decade of strained relations following the coup, which Erdoğa strongly opposed. The coup, which overthrew then-president Mohamed Morsi, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood and an ally of Erdoğan, had caused a deep rift between Ankara and Cairo. Erdoğan’s government had strongly supported the Muslim Brotherhood and was often at odds with the Egyptian government’s crackdown on the organization.

Turkey’s rapprochement with Saudi Arabia, Egypt and the UAE, countries that regard the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization, has occurred in parallel with restrictions on the Islamist group’s freedom of movement and ability to operate in the country. Turkey called on Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated TV stations to limit their critical coverage of el-Sisi and shut down at least one of the stations during Erdoğan’s visit to Jeddah last year.

Turkey refused to renew the residence permits of members or people linked to the group to persuade them to leave the country, reportedly arrested some of the leaders and is considering deporting many others at the request of the Egyptian president, perhaps to a third country.

Ankara has been trying to repair its broken relations with el-Sisi since 2020.

The first signs of a thaw came in May 2021, when a Turkish delegation visited Egypt to discuss possible normalization.

In November 2022 Erdoğan and el-Sisi shook hands in Qatar, which the Egyptian presidency heralded as a new beginning in their relations.

After Turkey was hit by two devastating earthquakes in February 2023, the two heads of state spoke on the phone.

The normalization of relations was completed by the mutual appointment of ambassadors in July 2023.

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