A day after Salman announced a plan to build a bridge over the Red Sea to Egypt, the heads of state met at the historic Abdeen Palace in Cairo to oversee the inking of a string of agreements Egypt hopes will help boost its battered economy.
In one of the most high-profile announcements, Cairo yesterday said it had agreed to demarcate its maritime borders with Saudi Arabia, officially placing two islands in the Straits of Tiran in Saudi territory.
Since touching down on Thursday, Salman and his delegation have announced a slew of investments in Egypt.
A live Egyptian state television broadcast yesterday showed an official announcing the latest agreements, signed by a representative of each country.
The two nations agreed "to set up a Saudi-Egyptian investment fund with a capital of 60 billion Saudi riyals (USD16 billion)," the announcer said, giving no further details.
More than a dozen other accords, including a memorandum of understanding to set up an industrial zone in Egypt, were also announced.
It has since pumped billions of dollars in aid and investment into Egypt.
Egyptian officials and media have heaped accolades on Salman, with state television welcoming him to what it called his "second country" -- a country Riyadh views as a cornerstone in its ambitions to be a regional leader against Iran.
But the agreement announced by the cabinet yesterday to settle the dispute over the islands of Tiran and Sanafir provoked an immediate backlash in Egypt, where thousands tweeted a hashtag accusing Sisi of selling the islands.
Earlier yesterday, Salman paid a visit to the prestigious Al-Azhar mosque.
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