Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Turkish PM becomes a hit after Davos

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Turkish PM becomes a hit after Davos

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Jan 31 2009


    Turkish PM becomes a hit after Davos

    ISTANBUL - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's heated exchange with
    Israeli President Shimon Peres at the World Economic Forum in Davos on
    Thursday was widely covered by Turkish newspapers yesterday.

    Daily Hürriyet went with the headline "Davos' Spirit Dies." In
    its sub-headline, the daily went on to say that Prime Minister
    ErdoÄ?an, who reacted harshly to Israeli President Peres's
    angry attitude, criticized the moderator for not giving him enough
    time and had left the panel. A caption beneath the headline made
    reference to moderator David Ignatius from the Washington Post
    stating that he was known for his closeness with the Armenian lobby
    and has in the past-criticized ErdoÄ?an's policies on the
    Middle East.

    Daily Star allocated the whole front page to the story, headlining the
    incident as a "Historic Ultimatum." A picture of ErdoÄ?an
    dismissing President Peres with a hand gesture took up the majority of
    the page and a quote from ErdoÄ?an was used as a sub-headline
    "When it comes to killing, you know very well how to kill."

    Daily Sabah said ErdoÄ?an had been welcomed by thousands of
    people at Istanbul's Atatürk Airport at 2.15 a.m.

    Daily Vatan's headline was " Peres Provoked, ErdoÄ?an left
    aggressively," and went on to quote ErdoÄ?an who spoke at a
    joint press conference, as saying that the Israeli president did not
    tell the truth in his 25-minute speech.

    Daily Radikal went with the headline "A KasimpaÅ?a tune in
    Davos," a reference to the prime minister's birthplace, and quoted the
    prime minister as saying he would never return to Davos again.

    Conservative newspapers Yeni Å?afak and Zaman also headlined the
    story. Yeni Å?afak went with " Historic Slap," and quoted
    ErdoÄ?an as saying, "Differences in religion are not
    important. Anti- Semitism and people and phobias against Muslims are
    human crimes, it does not matter what religion they are from." The
    daily also highlighted that Israeli President Shimon Perez had called
    ErdoÄ?an and apologized for the tension that occurred in Davos
    during the session on Gaza. Zaman headlined the incident as
    "ErdoÄ?an storms out of the panel and Peres apologizes."

    Foreign coverage of the incident
    The heated rhetoric of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an
    toward Israel made headlines across the world.

    BBC News reported that Turkey's prime minister stormed off the stage
    at the World Economic Forum in Davos after a heated debate on Gaza
    with Israel's president. It was reported that in reaction to
    ErdoÄ?ans remark: "I find it very sad that people applaud what
    you said. You killed people. And I think that it is very wrong," Peres
    responded: "The tragedy of Gaza is not Israel, it is Hamas, and if
    rockets were fired into Istanbul you would have reacted the same."

    Israeli English daily The Jerusalem Post covered the story of
    ErdoÄ?an criticizing Peres and leaving Davos as one of its top
    headlines and described the prime minister's arrival to Istanbul as
    the homecoming of a hero, stating "Some outside the airport gate held
    banners that applauded his Palestinian stance in Davos."

    Israel's daily Haaretz highlighted ErdoÄ?an's statement that his
    anger over Gaza expressed in Davos was directed at the Israeli
    government, not the Jewish people. "I am very sorry for what happened
    and friends could sometimes have an argument between themselves,"
    Peres told Erdogan during the telephone conversation, it was reported.
Working...
X