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The United Arab Emirates on Thursday announced it was setting up a $10 billion investment across multiple sectors in Israel, with whom it normalized ties last year.
The announcement was made following a call between Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday after the latter had postponed a visit to the UAE because Jordan has delayed granting overflight rights.
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“Through this fund, the UAE will invest in and alongside Israel across sectors including energy, manufacturing, water, space, healthcare and agri-tech. The investment fund will support development initiatives to promote regional economic cooperation between the two countries. Fund allocations will derive from government and private sector institutions,” the UAE said in a statement published on the state-run Emirates News Agency (WAM).
“The fund builds on the historic Abraham Accord and aims to bolster economic ties between two of the region’s thriving economies, unlocking investments and partnership opportunities to drive socio-economic progress,” the statement added.
Israel and the United Arab Emirates reached a historic peace deal on August 13 last year that led to a full normalization of diplomatic and trade relations between the two Middle Eastern nations in an agreement that former US President Donald Trump helped broker.
Israeli Intelligence Minister Eli Cohen has previously expected that annual trade between Israel and the UAE is expected to reach $4 billion in just three to five years.
Read more:
Open for business: How UAE-Israel peace is driving deals at breakneck speed
Israel, UAE reach historic US-brokered peace deal
‘Welcome to Israel’: First UAE delegation received by Israeli PM Netanyahu at airport
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