Kuwit City: Kuwait expressed its hopes on Monday that a landmark visit by Emir Shaikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah to visit Iran next week will strengthen security, stability and peace in the Gulf.

The visit comes amid a recent thaw in relations between Iran and Gulf states despite high sectarian tensions over the conflicts in Syria and Iraq.

Shaikh Sabah, on his first visit to Tehran as head of state, will lead a high-level delegation consisting of the ministers of foreign affairs, oil, finance and commerce and industry, the cabinet said in a statement.

It said it hoped the visit “would boost cooperation in various fields,” as well as strengthening “security, stability and peace in the region,” in the statement issued after the weekly cabinet meeting.

The two-day visit will start on June 1, the cabinet said.

Iran’s newly-appointed ambassador to Kuwait Ali Riza told reporters on Monday the emir’s visit “will give a push to regional cooperation and consolidate ties”.

He said Shaikh Sabah’s talks with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani will touch on the Syrian conflict and the situation in the Gulf.

Kuwait currently holds the rotating presidency of the Gulf Cooperation Council, which also includes Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and UAE.

The Iranian envoy said he expected the a number of cooperation agreements in fields including aviation, tourism, sports to be signed.

For years, Iran’s relations with the Gulf states have been frosty, with disagreements over unrest in Bahrain and the conflict in Syria, before Rouhani, a self-declared moderate, was elected president of the Islamic Republic last June.

In December last year, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif started a tour of Kuwait, the UAE, Oman and Qatar. But it ended without Zarif travelling to Iran’s main rival, Saudi Arabia, or Bahrain.

Two weeks ago, Riyadh’s Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al Faisal said he had invited his Iranian counterpart to visit.

Tehran welcomed the plan and stressed the need to boost relations after years of strained ties.

After his election, Rouhani said he wanted to reach out to Gulf Arab governments as part of efforts to end his country’s international isolation.