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ANKARA: Peres meets Palestinians in Turkish-led initiative

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  • ANKARA: Peres meets Palestinians in Turkish-led initiative

    Today's Zaman
    06.09.2007

    Peres meets Palestinians in Turkish-led initiative

    Shimon Peres yesterday met with members of a
    Turkish-Israeli-Palestinian business forum, the very first time
    Palestinian businessmen have been received by an Israeli president.

    "Two-and-a-half years ago, when we had the first meeting in Ankara, we
    failed to convince Israeli and Palestinian businessmen to agree even
    to get on the same minibus," said Rifat Hisarcýklýoðlu, whose Turkish
    Union of Chambers and Commodities Exchanges (TOBB) heads the joint
    Turkish-Israeli-Palestinian forum. "Today, they are received together
    by the Israeli president and pose together for the cameras."

    The forum, which held its first meeting in 2005 in Ankara at the
    initiative of then-Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül, has since been named
    the Ankara Forum for Economic Cooperation. The latest meeting in East
    Jerusalem was the sixth gathering of Turkish, Israeli and Palestinian
    members.

    Gül first floated the idea during a visit to Israel and Palestinian
    territories in late 2004; its motto was "industry for peace." The
    forum seeks, as its primary objective, to foster economic cooperation
    between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, such as the 2006
    transformation of the Erez Industrial Park into a Palestinian
    industrial free zone.

    Hisarcýklýoðlu was received by Peres together with Shraga Brosh,
    president of the Manufacturers Association of Israel, and Ahmed Hashem
    Al-Zughair, chairman of the Palestinian Chambers of Commerce, Industry
    and Agriculture.

    The TOBB chairman requested a presidential summit of the three
    countries in Turkey to sign memorandums reiterating political
    willingness to further develop the "industry for peace" initiative. He
    suggested that he had been encouraged by the fact that three leaders
    known to support economic efforts for peace in the Middle East --
    namely Peres in Israel, Gül in Turkey and Mahmoud Abbas in Palestine
    -- are at the helm of the state apparatus in their respective
    countries. Peres said he would be glad to attend such a meeting if
    preliminary work among foreign ministers of the three sides comes up
    with a go-ahead for such a gathering.

    Plans forged at 6th forum meeting

    The sixth meeting of the forum opened on Tuesday and was attended by
    some 20 businessmen from Turkey, Israel and Palestine. The
    participants agreed on plans to establish a joint Israeli-Palestinian
    industrial park in the West Bank and a permanent office for the forum
    in East Jerusalem.

    "We have been putting much effort recently into building stronger
    business relationships between Israel and the Palestinian Authority,"
    Israel's Brosh was quoted as saying yesterday in the Jerusalem Post.
    "We hope that the establishment of the industrial park will lead to
    'economic peace' between the two business communities and will also
    strengthen the political ties between Israel and the Palestinian
    Authority."

    Should an additional industrial park be established, the day-to-day
    operations will be overseen, as at Erez, by an international
    corporation run by Turkey. TOBB, which oversees the Erez industrial
    zone, will perform the same function in the additional industrial
    zone. There also will be major Turkish investment in plants in the
    industrial area, which would manufacture goods that then would be able
    to enter the EU, the US and even Persian Gulf countries duty-free,
    according to the newspaper. The hope is that, similar to Erez, both
    Palestinian and Israeli businessmen will invest in this area.

    Brosh added that since the Turks have taken over operations at Erez,
    some 100 factories employing approximately 5,000 Palestinian workers
    have been established, expressing his hope that the new industrial
    zone will match the Erez's success.

    Support from Blair

    Forum representatives also met with former British Prime Minister Tony
    Blair, now the Quartet's special envoy in the Middle East, in
    Jerusalem yesterday. Blair was in Jerusalem as part of a 10-day trip
    to the Middle East.

    Blair was briefed by Ankara Forum for Economic Cooperation
    participants about the forum's activities during a half-hour meeting
    that was closed to the press. He praised the initiative and offered
    his help if needed, meeting participants said. He also said he
    attached great importance to Turkey's role in the Middle East and
    wanted to visit Turkey before a planned international conference on
    the Middle East.

    The forum's Turkish delegation also met with Palestinian President
    Mahmoud Abbas and Palestinian PM Salam Fayyad on Wednesday.
    Peres: Armenian issue should be tackled by historians

    Israeli President Shimon Peres defended a neutral political stance on
    Armenian claims of genocide at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire,
    saying the issue should be left to historians.

    "I agree with what Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan said. The past
    is in the past and the best thing to do would be to leave the issue to
    historians," Peres said as he received a delegation of Turkish,
    Israeli and Palestinian businessmen members of the Ankara Forum for
    Economic Cooperation.

    An influential US Jewish group, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), last
    month revised its long-held position and said the World War I events
    should be considered genocide. Turkish officials were then reassured
    by Israel that the country's position has not changed with the ADL
    move and that it remained opposed to resolutions in the US Congress
    that support the Armenian claims.

    Peres said he has talked to US Congress officials on the matter and
    emphasized that a Congress resolution would be irrelevant and
    unnecessary in such a context. "No resolution can change history," he
    said, adding that a politician's duty is to deal with the future.

    Hisarcýklýoðlu said for his part that passage of such a resolution in
    the US Congress would harm not only Turkey-US relations, but also
    Turkey's ties with other countries, apparently referring to relations
    with Israel.

    06.09.2007
    News

    FÝKRÝ TÜRKEL

    Source: http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load =detay&link=121408

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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