Sudan's visiting foreign minister, Ibrahim Ghandour, and his Egyptian counterpart, Sameh Shoukry, spoke of the "holy" relations binding the two Nile-Basin nations, but reported no tangible progress in a joint news conference they held in the Egyptian capital after talks.
"There are deeply entrenched relations capable of overcoming whatever is inflicted upon them," Shoukry said, striking a positive note. "We are working toward a frank dialogue capable of removing misunderstandings and confusion." At the center of tensions between the two is sovereignty over the so-called Halayeb Triangle on the Red Sea, an issue that dates back to colonial times. Egypt refuses to submit the dispute to international arbitration, a Sudanese request.
Today, Ghandour, the Sudanese minister, told reporters he delivered a message from Bashir to Egyptian President Abdel- Fattah el-Sissi on bilateral relations and conveyed what he called some of Bashir's "concerns."
He did not elaborate, but added that the decision to ban Egyptian farm and animal imports was made on technical basis and acknowledged that a Cabinet decision to ratify the ban last week may have been ill-timed.
The media in both Egypt and Sudan have exacerbated the two nation's differences, with sensational comments and some biting mockery that, on one occasion, touched on the size of Pharaonic pyramids in both countries.