Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi met senior Turkish officials in Ankara on Wednesday.
It was a sign of improving ties between the two countries, which differ on major Middle East issues.
“Jordan is the country we assign value to its opinions in our region,” Turkey’s foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, said after the meeting.
After years of being sidelined by Donald Trump's administration, Amman sought a higher international profile since the election of US President Joe Biden in January last year.
The kingdom signed a military pact with the US last year, enhancing Jordan’s position as a base of US troops as tension between Ankara and Washington mounted.
Without criticising Ankara, Jordan also supported diplomatic moves by Greece and Cyprus to counter what the two countries regard as threatening Turkish actions off their shores.
Relations between Turkey and Jordan have worsened in the past decade over Turkish support for extremist factions in the Syrian civil war and Ankara’s backing of Qatar in disputes with other Gulf countries.
Jordan supported the 2015 Russian intervention, which propped up the regime of Bashar Al Assad but almost brought Turkey and Russia to war in northern Syria.
In the past two years, Amman has sought to accommodate the Assad regime, while Ankara remains publicly opposed to it.
Mr Cavusoglu said Turkey gives “great importance” to its relations with Jordan.
“We share many common challenges,” he said, a reference to the hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees in the two countries.
He said Turkish Airlines’ flights from Istanbul to Jordan’s port city of Aqaba would resume in the next few weeks and that his government supported efforts to attract Turkish tourists. Service on the route was put on hold early in the pandemic.
Mr Cavusoglu said Ankara encouraged more Jordanian exports to Turkey to redress a $1 billion annual bilateral trade volume heavily in favour of Turkey.
The ministers discussed regional issues as well as the war in Ukraine, he said.
Like most Arab countries, Jordan has refrained from condemning the Russian assault on Ukraine. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the assault unacceptable.
Mr Safadi is due to meet the Turkish president later on Wednesday.
He said Jordan agreed with Ankara that Syria must become safe enough for refugees to return voluntarily.
Prop idols
Girls full-contact rugby may be in its infancy in the Middle East, but there are already a number of role models for players to look up to.
Sophie Shams (Dubai Exiles mini, England sevens international)
An Emirati student who is blazing a trail in rugby. She first learnt the game at Dubai Exiles and captained her JESS Primary school team. After going to study geophysics at university in the UK, she scored a sensational try in a cup final at Twickenham. She has played for England sevens, and is now contracted to top Premiership club Saracens.
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Seren Gough-Walters (Sharjah Wanderers mini, Wales rugby league international)
Few players anywhere will have taken a more circuitous route to playing rugby on Sky Sports. Gough-Walters was born in Al Wasl Hospital in Dubai, raised in Sharjah, did not take up rugby seriously till she was 15, has a master’s in global governance and ethics, and once worked as an immigration officer at the British Embassy in Abu Dhabi. In the summer of 2021 she played for Wales against England in rugby league, in a match that was broadcast live on TV.
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Erin King (Dubai Hurricanes mini, Ireland sevens international)
Aged five, Australia-born King went to Dubai Hurricanes training at The Sevens with her brothers. She immediately struck up a deep affection for rugby. She returned to the city at the end of last year to play at the Dubai Rugby Sevens in the colours of Ireland in the Women’s World Series tournament on Pitch 1.
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