Turkey agreed to provide its increasingly popular drones to Egypt after the two countries normalised ties following a decade of rupture, Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said on Sunday.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan is set to travel to Egypt on February 14 to meet counterpart Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, in his first visit since Ankara and Cairo upgraded relations by appointing ambassadors last year.
Fidan told private A Haber television that Turkey's leader will discuss bilateral and regional issues including trade, energy and security with Sisi.
"Normalisation in our relations is important for Egypt to have certain technologies. We have an agreement to provide (Egypt) unmanned air vehicles and other technologies," Fidan said, without further elaborating.
International demand for Turkish drones has soared after their impact on conflicts in Syria, Libya, Azerbaijan and Ukraine. Ethiopia, which has frosty relations with Egypt over a hydropower dam on the Blue Nile, is among buyers of Turkish drones.

Trump backs down on strikes on Iran's power network
ICE agents begin deploying at some US airports
Air Canada jet collision shuts LaGuardia; pilots killed, dozens injured
Kuwait launches probe into espionage, state security cases
Trump, Iran threaten to escalate conflict with attacks on energy and water facilities
Fuel reservoir in Russia's Primorsk port on fire after drone attack, governor says
Ambulances from Jewish community organisation torched, UK police say
Israeli airstrikes kill four in Gaza, Palestinian officials say
