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In Turkey, Peres Gives First Presidential Address To Muslim Legislat

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  • In Turkey, Peres Gives First Presidential Address To Muslim Legislat

    IN TURKEY, PERES GIVES FIRST PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS TO MUSLIM LEGISLATURE
    By Barak Ravid, Haaretz Correspondent, Haaretz Service and Agencies

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    Nov 13 2007

    ANKARA - In an historic first address to a Muslim state parliament by
    an Israeli president, Shimon Peres told Turkish lawmakers Tuesday that
    Israel is ready to end its decades-long conflict with the Palestinians.

    In the first speech by an Israeli president before a Muslim
    legislature, Peres said, "Israel is determined to reach a two-state
    solution."

    Peres expressed the gratitude of Israel to the people in Turkey
    who opened their doors to Jews when they were expelled from Spain in
    1492. Turkish Sultan Beyazid II accepted Jews into the Ottoman Empire,
    the predecessor of modern Turkey, after they were expelled from Spain.

    "Here, they found a home of tolerance where they could freely
    practice their religion," Peres said in his speech, given in Hebrew
    and translated into Turkish. "I came here to express my gratitude
    to Turkey."

    Turkey also aided Jews fleeing the Holocaust, including Turkish
    Jews abroad.

    Turkey's President Abdullah Gul and Palestinian Authority Chairman
    Mahmoud Abbas were among those in the audience in Turkey's 550-seat
    Parliament.

    Earlier Tuesday, Abbas expressed optimisim on the prospects for peace,
    following a meeting with Peres in the Turkish capital.

    "If peace comes and the occupation comes to an end, Israel will live
    in a sea of peace," Abbas said at a joint news conference with Peres.

    Abbas said his administration was preparing for the upcoming Middle
    East conference in Annapolis, Maryland, aimed at relaunching peace
    negotiations between the two sides after they broke down amid violence
    seven years ago.

    "We are working with our full force to ensure that the meeting in
    Annapolis is a success," he said.

    Turkey asks Peres for a Turkish Cypriot representative office in
    Tel Aviv

    Turkey has requested openning a Turkish Cypriot representative office
    in Tel Aviv, according to Turkish President Abdullah Gul, who raised
    the issue at his meeting with President Shimon Peres Monday.

    Peres said he would have to discuss the matter with Israel's Foreign
    Ministry before replying.

    The Israeli delegation to Turkey was surprised when Gul broached the
    matter of Turkish Cyprus at the first meeting. In 1974, following a
    coup against the democratic Cypriot government by the Greek military
    junta then ruling in Athens, Turkey invaded Cyprus and occupied
    the northern half of the island. In 1983 the Turkish minority there
    declared independence, which is seen by the world, apart from Turkey,
    as occupied territory of sovereign Cyprus.

    Gul told Peres that Israel must halt settlement construction in
    the West Bank if it wishes to seriously pursue peace efforts with
    the Palestinians. "Israel's security is important, but one can't
    ignore Palestinian problems," he said. "Israel must stop building
    in settlements."

    Palestinian leaders, he said, "spread out maps before me and show me
    the settlement growth. It doesn't leave me much to say on the matter."

    Peres told a joint news conference that he believed that Israel could
    currently make peace with the Palestinians, but cautioned that the
    process might take time.

    Gul told Peres that Damascus should be invited to the Annapolis peace
    summit at the end of the month, and that Syrian President Bashar Assad
    "is interested in real peace." Peres said "Assad needs to take action
    that shows he is serious, and come to Jerusalem."

    The two presidents also discussed U.S. congressional legislation -
    to which Turkey is vehemently opposed - which labels the massacre of
    Armenians during World War I as a genocide.

    "It's not a good idea to spoil relations between Turkey and Israel
    because of events from 90 years ago," Gul told Peres, "but we can't
    stand a situation in which every half year the issue is raised in
    the United States."

    Regarding the Iranian nuclear threat, Peres told Gul that it is clear
    that Iran, which claims its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes,
    is actually trying to develop nuclear arms. Gul disagreed, but said
    Turkey would not stand for Iran acquiring nuclear arms.

    Peres requested that asked Gul send the Siloam inscription - describing
    the tunnel digging in King Hezkiya's days in 703 CE and now exhibited
    in Archaeological Museum of Istanbul - to Jerusalem for Israel's
    60th anniversary.
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