Tanzania told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday that the East African country would be opening an embassy in Israel for the first time.
Foreign
Minister Augustine Mahiga gave Netanyahu a letter from Tanzanian President John
Magufuli in which Dodoma’s intention to establish a permanent envoy was
expressed.
Bilateral ties between Israel and Tanzania were severed following the 1973 Yom
Kippur War. Relations were reestablished in 1995, but Israel still conducts its
relations with Tanzania via Nairobi in Kenya. Tanzania has reportedly expressed
interest in reopening a mission in Israel multiple times in recent years.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with African leaders in Uganda on July 4, 2016. (Kobi Gideon/GPO)
Netanyahu was taking part in a multilateral meeting in Entebbe,
Uganda, with the presidents of Uganda, Kenya, South Sudan and Zambia, Ethiopian
Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, and Mahiga.
The
prime minister called the summit a “milestone,” marking “monumental change in
the relations between Israel and Africa.
“I believe Israel is the perfect partner for the countries of
Africa,” Netanyahu said in a statement. “We think that Israel now is the best
partner that the countries of Africa could have, and it’s something that is
dear to our hearts.
“I believe in Africa. I believe in your future and I believe in
our partnership for this future,” Netanyahu said. “We want a better future for
you, a better future for all of us, and we think we can be your perfect
partners.”
In first, Tanzania to open embassy in Israel
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