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| The journalists are set to visit Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial and holy sites in Jerusalem AFP |
Jerusalem (AFP) - Israel's foreign ministry said Sunday the country will this week host six journalists from Arab countries including, for the first time, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.
The visit
comes as Israel seeks to improve ties with Gulf Arab countries, with which it
has no formal diplomatic relations.
Those
states have resisted offering Israel formal recognition due to its continuing
occupation of Palestinian territory, but their relations have warmed of late,
largely due to common concerns over Iran.
The
journalists will visit Jerusalem's Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, parliament
and holy sites, among others, the foreign ministry said in a statement.
It said it
had "the aim of exposing the journalists ?- some of whom come from
countries that do not have diplomatic relations with Israel -? to Israeli
positions on diplomatic and geopolitical issues".
Jordan is
also participating, the ministry said.
Jordan is
one of only two Arab countries, along with Egypt, that have diplomatic
relations with Israel.
In another
recent sign of a thaw, a group of Israeli journalists attended the US-led
economic conference on Israeli-Palestinian peace in the Gulf state of Bahrain
in late June.
The
Palestinian leadership boycotted the conference, citing a series of moves
against them by US President Donald Trump's administration.
On
Thursday, Israeli foreign minister Israel Katz said that he had met his
Bahraini counterpart publicly for the first time during a visit to Washington
last week.
Katz also
recently visited Abu Dhabi for a UN climate conference, where he met United
Nations chief Antonio Guterres and an unnamed "high ranking UAE
official".

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