Saudi king invites Syria's Assad to attend Arab League summit

Syria's president has received an invite from the Saudi king to attend an Arab League summit this month. It would be Bashar al-Assad's first since 2011.
2 min read
Arab countries are making key demands for Assad to curb Syria's flourishing drugs trade [Getty/archive]

Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz has invited Syria's President Bashar al-Assad to attend an Arab League summit in the Gulf country on May 19, Syrian state media reported on Wednesday.

Arab foreign ministers had on Sunday agreed that Syria could resume its role in the body, 12 years after its membership was suspended over Assad's brutal crackdown on protests against him.

The invitation is a powerful signal that the regional isolation of Assad and his regime is ending.

Regional countries - including Saudi Arabia, Qatar and others - had for years supported anti-Assad rebels but the Syrian regime army - which had crucial backing from Iran, Russia and allied paramilitary groups -regained most of the country.

The icy ties with Assad began to thaw more quickly after the devastating earthquakes in February. Saudi Arabia's foreign minister visited Damascus last month and his ministry on Tuesday said that the kingdom will reopen its diplomatic mission in Damascus.

Sources had told Reuters in April that Assad would be invited to the summit. While Arab countries appear to have brought the Syrian leader in from the cold, they are still making key demands for him to curb Syria's flourishing drugs trade and secure the return of refugees.

(Reuters)