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  • Tel Aviv: Workers Reject Turkish Vacations

    WORKERS REJECT TURKISH VACATIONS

    Ynetnews
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3896347,00.html
    June 1 2010
    Israel

    Worker committee heads suggest alternative destinations in face of
    'anti-Israel' propaganda, say won't go to Turkey - 'not even for free'

    Gil Kol Published: 06.01.10, 18:19 / Israel Travel

    Turkish tourist sites will have to make do with tourists from Europe
    this summer. Israeli workers will take their custom to Cyprus and
    Greece, if the intentions of workers' committees are fulfilled.

    Vaadim, a firm coordinating information about economic activity
    among workers' committees in Israel, published a statement saying
    that after the wave of anti-Israel propaganda led by Turkey and
    Turkey's rapprochement with Iran, together with its dominant role in
    the "Freedom Flotilla" to Gaza, workers' committees have declared
    that workers will not go to Turkey for their vacations - "not even
    for free."

    Vaadim CEO Yaakov Alush said to Ynet that, as head of the firm,
    he recommends finding alternatives more moral and no less appealing
    than Turkey.

    "Not even for free." Did they really say that?

    "This came from the chairman of the workers' committee at the First
    International Bank, Yona Goldschlager, the chairman of the Negev
    Nuclear Research Center, Shalom Shlomo, the rail workers' committee,
    and many others. They said, 'We don't intend to take our workers to
    Turkey - not even for free'."

    And indeed, says Alush, this is also the position of the workers'
    committees of Egged, El Al, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Haifa
    University, Bank Leumi, Clalit Health Services, Tel Aviv Municipality,
    the Agricultural Ministry, Tnuva, Paz, Ashdod refineries, Israel
    Post, the Ministry of Housing and Construction, Menora Mivtachim and
    many more.

    "Despite an aggressive PR campaign, advertising, and deals of $99
    per person, Turkey didn't manage to repeat its previous success,
    which reached a peak in 2008 with over a million Israeli visitors,"
    Alush said.

    "So far in 2010, only a few dozen thousand Israelis have gone to
    Turkey. The committees flexed their muscles and used their influence
    throughout last year, including during Passover, and didn't take
    workers to Turkey. They also avoided doing so in the summer. This is
    more than a million workers."

    What alternatives are there to Turkey's all-inclusive deals?

    "A tourism fair will be held for the committees in July, and many
    alternatives will be offered. Greek Cyprus and the Greek islands are
    the most likely."

    It sounds like political tourism. Aren't there any deals to Armenia?

    "Unfortunately, tourism there is not developed, but it's worth thinking
    about that for the future."

    Turkey: Israeli tourism recovering

    The Turkish Tourism Bureau in Israel said that since the beginning
    of the year there has been an 18% increase in the number of tourists
    from Israel, compared to the same period last year. "We hope this
    trend will continue during the summer months. Moreover, we don't
    usually mix politics and tourism."

    Alush does not accept this claim. He rejected this approach and
    attacked Rani Rahav, the Israeli PR giant currently handling Turkish
    PR.

    "How can you separate politics and tourism when they spit in your
    nation's face, and meet and support Hamas and Iran murderers? I find
    it hard to understand the motives of any office in actively supporting
    the economy of any anti-Israel state," he said.

    "I think that he (Rahav) is making a mistake; you don't necessarily
    accept every business deal. It hurts the image he tried to create
    for his office as patriotic, as if Israel was important to him."

    Rani Rahav responded to these accusations.

    "Israel is important to me, Israel is in my heart, and because of
    this the tourist connection with Turkey is especially important to
    me," he said. "Politics should stay in Ankara and Jerusalem and the
    special connection between the Turkish and Israeli nations needs to be
    maintained - and the proof is the rise in Turkish tourism to Israel
    (from the beginning of the year till now, compared with the same
    period of 2009)."

    Is a tourism boycott a fair way of criticizing a government?

    "Even the Turkish nation wouldn't continue with its regular daily
    life if Israel violated its sovereignty with provocative acts off
    its shores," Alush replied.




    From: A. Papazian
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