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  • Erdogan's fiery remarks hurting Turkish-Israeli ties

    Earthtimes (press release), UK
    Jan 30 2009


    Erdogan's fiery remarks hurting Turkish-Israeli ties - Feature

    Posted : Fri, 30 Jan 2009 09:59:55 GMT
    Author : DPA


    Ankara - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been one of
    the harshest critics of Israel's recent military operations in the
    Gaza Strip but he surprised all observers with his remarkably fiery
    remarks made Thursday night at a panel discussion with Israel's
    President Shimon Peres. "You (Israel) know very well how to kill
    people," an enraged Erdogan said to Peres at the World Economic Forum
    in Davos, Switzerland. "Your raising your voice (to me) shows the
    psychology of the guilty."

    "You killed people," Erdogan said, adding "the Sixth Commandment says,
    'Thou shall not kill.'"

    After being cut off by the moderator and complaining that Peres had
    been allowed more time to speak, Erdogan stormed out of the panel
    discussion saying "for me Davos is finished."

    Word of Erdogan's explosive speech spread quickly in Turkey and
    thousands of people gathered at Istanbul's Ataturk Airport in the
    early hours of Friday morning to welcome home what one banner
    described as "the conquer of Davos."

    From the first day of Israel's military offensive in Gaza Erdogan has
    been a loud critic, condemning Israel's "disproportionate use of
    force," saying the operation was a "crime against humanity" and a
    "stain on history's page."

    The prime minister's forceful statements and anti-Semitism on show at
    protests around Turkey were enough to alarm US Jewish lobbying groups
    to issue a public appeal to Erdogan.

    "Our Jewish friends in Turkey feel besieged and threatened. A
    connection is clearly perceived between the inflammatory denunciation
    of Israel by Turkish officials and the rise of anti-Semitism," the
    leaders of five US Jewish lobby groups said in an open letter to
    Erdogan.

    At various protests around Turkey demonstrators have shouted
    anti-Israel and anti-Jewish slogans. A group of nationalists in
    Eskisehir made headlines when they hung a sign outside their office
    which read "dogs allowed, Armenians and Jews cannot enter."

    Facing increased criticism from abroad as well as from liberals in the
    Turkish press, Erdogan in recent days had toned down his remarks and
    has specifically condemned anti-Semitism.

    In an attempt to distance the government from its perceived pro- Hamas
    line, Foreign Minister Ali Babacan earlier this week told reporters
    that Hamas needed to decide whether it wants to be an armed group or a
    political party. It was a line that Erdogan repeated Thursday night in
    Davos.

    In recent years Turkey has attempted to use its position in having
    good ties with both Israel and its fellow Muslim nations in the Middle
    East to play the role of mediator but Erdogan's statements appear to
    have undermined that aim.

    "We have lost the impartiality we had between Hamas and Fatah, as well
    as between Syria and Israel," retired diplomat Inal Batu was quoted in
    Hurriyet newspaper on Friday.

    After their heated debate Thursday night Peres telephoned Erdogan and
    apologized for raising his voice. Erdogan in turn has said that his
    walking out of the debate was in protest at the moderator, not at
    Peres. The diplomatic spinning has started but there is no doubt that
    Turkish-Israeli ties have been hurt.

    http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/253 445,erdogans-fiery-remarks-hurting-turkish-israeli -ties--feature.html
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