S. Korea, Egypt agree to conduct joint study on free trade deal
By Kim Deok-hyun
CAIRO, Jan. 20 (Yonhap) -- South Korea and Egypt on Thursday agreed to conduct a joint feasibility study on a bilateral free trade agreement, taking the first step towards a deal as Seoul and Cairo seek to deepen economic cooperation.
The agreement was signed after President Moon Jae-in held summit talks with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Moon's office said in a statement.
An FTA with Egypt, if realized, would mark South Korea's first free trade pact with an African country.
Bilateral trade between Korea and Egypt has been on the rise in recent years and stood at US$2.3 billion last year. South Korea's accumulated investment into Egypt reached $730 million at the end of last year.
Moon and the Egyptian president also signed a memorandum of understanding that calls for Seoul to provide a soft loan worth $1 billion to Egypt over the next five years.
The loan is expected to fund construction and infrastructure projects in Egypt, including upgrading railway networks and building desalination plants, according to Korean officials.
Besides, the two leaders agreed to expand the scope of existing cooperation in space, defense, cultural and people-to-people exchanges, according to the statement.
Moon also asked Egypt to support South Korea's bid to host the World Expo in the nation's southeastern port city of Busan in 2030.
Moon's visit to Cairo marked the first trip by a South Korean president to the African nation in 16 years.
Later in the day, Moon will attend a business forum where companies of the two nations plan to discuss how to strengthen cooperation in electric cars, information technology and transportation.
Egypt is the final leg of Moon's three-nation trip to the Middle East that took him to the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.
Meanwhile, Moon told an Arabic newspaper that South Korea and Egypt could enjoy mutual benefits if they sign a free trade deal.
"Egypt is expanding opportunities for Korea to enter the African market, while Korea is expanding opportunities for Egypt to enter the Asian market," Moon said in the interview, which was published earlier in the day.
kdh@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
BTS' Jungkook's 'Seven' chosen as hottest hit outside U.S.
-
From pastime to academic discipline: Exhibition spotlights evolution of Korean embroidery
-
Gov't to open 10 trails near DMZ for visitors next month
-
Number of N. Korean defectors entering S. Korea reaches 43 in Q1
-
N. Korea dismantles S. Korean building near shuttered Kaesong complex
-
From pastime to academic discipline: Exhibition spotlights evolution of Korean embroidery
-
BTS' Jungkook's 'Seven' chosen as hottest hit outside U.S.
-
Trump suggests U.S. could withdraw its troops if S. Korea does not contribute more to support USFK: TIME
-
Number of N. Korean defectors entering S. Korea reaches 43 in Q1
-
Gov't to open 10 trails near DMZ for visitors next month
-
Defense chiefs of U.S., Australia, Japan decry N.K.-Russia military cooperation
-
S. Korean military shoots down unidentified balloon near western maritime border in March
-
Police tracking down bomb threat on public facility
-
S. Korea, China, Japan to hold trilateral summit May 26-27: report
-
(3rd LD) Russia sent more than 165,000 barrels of refined petroleum to N. Korea in March: White House