Macron invites new Syrian interim president, al-Sharaa, to FranceĀ 

French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday spoke on the phone with new Syrian Interim President, Ahmed al-Sharaa, and invited him to visit France in the coming weeks.

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French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday spoke on the phone with new Syrian Interim President, Ahmed al-Sharaa, and invited him to visit France in the coming weeks.

This appeared  to be al-Sharaaā€™s first direct contact with an European head of state.

According to a statement from the Syrian presidential office, Macron congratulated al-Sharaa on taking over the presidency and on ā€œliberating the country.ā€™ā€™

There was initially no official confirmation of the invitation from Paris.

According to the ƉlysĆ©e Palace, Macron took the initiative for the phone call in view of an international conference on Syria set to take place in Paris on Feb.13.

Macron had expressed the hope that the process initiated by the interim government would fully meet the aspirations of the Syrian people.

The statement said Macron also stressed Franceā€™s loyalty to the democratic forces in Syria and called for their full integration into the Syrian transition process, according to Paris.

Macron said France was working to lift sanctions against Syria in order to promote economic recovery and growth, according to the statement.

Al-Sharaa thanked Macron for Franceā€™s support for the Syrian people in recent years.

After civil war broke out in Syria in 2011, France provided logistical and military support to rebels in the country.

Al-Sharaa was appointed Syrian interim president a week ago, after his Islamist militia HTS led a lightning rebel offensive that overthrew the previous government of long-time dictator Bashar al-Assad in December.

Since taking office, al-Sharaa has travelled to Saudi Arabia and Turkey and received high-ranking delegations from the EU, among others.

France is rapidly pursuing its rapprochement with the new rulers in Syria.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noƫl Barrot and his German counterpart Annalena Baerbock visited Damascus on behalf of the EU in early January.

Shortly before the call with Macron, the Syrian Authority for Land and Sea Ports announced that French shipping giant CMA CGM is to continue operating the important Latakia container terminal.

The CMA CGM is to continue operating the important Latakia container terminal on the Mediterranean Sea under a new contract.

The agreement includes ā€œnew conditions and mechanismsā€ as well as the settlement of debts from both sides from the past decade, it said. Latakia is Syriaā€™s most important port.

Iran had also sought to control the terminal, which CMA CGM had operated for years. 

(dpa/NAN)