TEHRAN,
October 1 (IslamOnline & news Agencies) - Iran and Egypt, two
heavy-weight countries in the Islamic world, are working to mend their
fences.
Iranian
Foreign Minister Kamal Kharazi and his Egyptian counterpart Ahmed Maher
ushered in the new rapprochement bid during a meeting in New York held
on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session..
Commenting
on his meeting with Kharazi in New York, Maher said in comments
published by Egyptian newspapers on Sunday September 29, that Egypt was
to hold talks with Iran aimed at normalizing diplomatic relations broken
off after the 1979 Islamic revolution.
The
ministers also agreed that the two countries' embassies to the United
Nations would hold talks on the remaining obstacles to a full
restoration of ties, Maher said.
Iranian
officials said Tuesday, October 01, 2002, that the country has yet to
decide whether to change the name of a Tehran street commemorating the
assassin of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat, despite signs that Tehran
and Cairo are seeking to restore diplomatic ties.
An
official on Tehran city council said a decision to rename Khaled
Eslamboli Avenue had been made, but that the foreign ministry had been
given the final say.
But
a foreign ministry official said it had yet to rule on the matter:
"If a decision is made, it is going to be announced," the
official told AFP.
The
street name is one of the obstacles to restoring full diplomatic
relations between Tehran and Cairo.
The
street also features a large mural of the man who gunned down Sadat at a
military parade in October 1981.
For
its part, Cairo has a street named after the former shah of Iran, who
was given shelter by the Sadat government and died in Egypt in 1980.
Back
in January, Tehran city council said it was in favor of renaming the
street "Martyrs of the Intifada", in honor of those who have
died in the Palestinian uprising against the Israeli occupation.