Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has stated that Tehran's core policy is to support countries' distancing from the Zionist regime.
“Negligence by some Muslim countries with respect to this principled policy of the Islamic Republic of Iran has inflicted a heavy blow to the Islamic Ummah,” Raisi said in a meeting with Sudanese Foreign Minister Ali al-Sadiq Ali in Tehran on Monday.
He added that the criminal Israeli regime has always hatched plots to obstruct Muslim countries’ path towards progress.
Israel would be neither a friend of Muslim countries nor interested in their development, he emphasized.
The Iranian president criticized some Muslim countries’ move to normalize relations with the Tel Aviv regime, which he said runs counter to their nature.
“Had these countries tried to cut off their relations with the Zionists, today we would not have witnessed the continuation of attacks and bombings against the oppressed and Muslim people of Gaza,” Raisi pointed out.
Four Arab countries – the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco – agreed to normalize relations with Israel under US-brokered agreements in 2020, when former US President Donald Trump was in office.
Spearheaded by the UAE, the move has sparked widespread condemnations from the Palestinians as well as nations and human rights advocates across the world, especially within the Muslim world.
Palestinians see the accords as a stab in their back and a direct affront to their cause to liberate their lands from Israeli occupation.
Elsewhere in his remarks, Raisi said Iran fully supports Sudan’s territorial integrity and the establishment of a powerful government in the African country.
He also welcomed revival of mutual relations after seven years of hiatus.
Pointing to the two countries’ capacities and determination to promote political, economic and cultural relations, he added that the exchange of ambassadors and the reopening of embassies in Tehran and Khartoum have prepared an appropriate ground for enhanced relations.
Back in October 2023, Iran and Sudan agreed to restore diplomatic relations after seven years to serve the two countries’ interests.
Tehran and Khartoum decided to restore relations after Iran and Saudi Arabia signed a China-brokered agreement in March 2023 to resume ties following a seven-year break.
Riyadh closed its diplomatic missions in Tehran in 2016 after they were ransacked by protesters enraged by the Saudi execution of top Shia cleric Nimr Baqir al-Nimr.
For his part, the Sudanese foreign minister stressed his country is keen to restore its political and diplomatic relations with Iran.
He commended Iran’s political support for Sudan in international circles and said Khartoum is ready to develop economic and commercial cooperation with Tehran.
In a meeting earlier in the day, Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and his Sudanese counterpart expressed the determination of their countries to strengthen cooperation.
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