French head to begin Syria visit

Other News Materials 3 September 2008 12:28 (UTC +04:00)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy is due to visit Syria as part of efforts to improve ties between the two countries, reported BBC.

He described his trip as a "message of friendship" to the Syrians, according to Syria's al-Watan newspaper.

Relations between Paris and Damascus plummeted after the murder of former Lebanese PM Rafik Hariri in 2005.

Syria's critics accuse Damascus of being behind the assassination, a charge Syria has firmly denied.

Mr Sarkozy's two-day visit to Syria is the first by a Western head of state in five years.

He hosted Syria's President Bashar al-Assad in July and he appears determined to bring Syria, a long-time foe of the US and Israel, back into the international fold, correspondents say.

During the Paris summit, Syria and Lebanon, an important ally of France, agreed to open embassies in each other's capitals for the first since the 1940s.

"Syria can provide an irreplaceable contribution to solving Middle East issues," Mr Sarkozy told al-Watan in an interview to be published later on Wednesday, the AFP news agency reports.

"It is important that Syria plays a positive role in the region," the French president said, adding that peace in the Middle East "passes through" Syria and France.

Mr Sarkozy is due to meet President Assad at a dinner on Wednesday evening.

On Thursday, the two presidents will be joined by top officials from Turkey and Qatar for talks on Lebanon and Syria's indirect peace talks with Israel. Ankara has been mediating for several months in the Israeli-Syrian talks, while Qatar brokered a deal in May to resolve Lebanon's prolonged political crisis.

Latest

Latest