Saudi Arabia, Rwanda Sign Agreement to Boost Cooperation
Saudi Arabia is holding strong to its cooperation with the African Union as a policy determined to spread peace and security and promote conflict resolution and a strategy to advance development and investment across the African continent.
Over the last period, African
leaders and senior officials have held comprehensive meetings and negotiations
with representatives of the Kingdom.
Saudi Minister of State for
African Affairs Ahmed bin Abdul Aziz Kattan met Rwandan Foreign Minister
Vincent Perrotta in Kigali on Tuesday. The two ministers signed an agreement to
boost cooperation between the two countries.
The deal aims to strengthen the
existing bonds between the two states, and seeks to enhance cooperation in all
sectors, including education, art, culture, media, tourism, youth empowerment,
and sports.
It also opens up prospects for new
bilateral deals in areas of common interest.
Earlier, Kattan also met Rwandan
President Paul Kagame. They reviewed bilateral ties and discussed ways to
enhance them.
The minister relayed greetings
from King Salman bin Abdulaziz, the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, and
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
For his part, Kagame returned the
greetings in kind and voiced his appreciation for the efforts of the Saudi
leadership and people.
The president also expressed hope
for further broadening the horizon of bilateral ties shared between the Kingdom
and his country.
Kattan reaffirmed Saudi Arabia’s
desire to spend relentless efforts to build all-encompassing cooperation and
partnership with the African state.
He noted that his meeting with
Perrotta was “fruitful,” saying it reviewed shared ties and means of bolstering
them, as well as reinforcing mutually beneficial economic cooperation.
Kattan had earlier concluded
official visits to South Sudan, South Africa, Djibouti, and Uganda.