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TelAviv: Ministers to boycott Turkish Independence Day celebrations

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  • TelAviv: Ministers to boycott Turkish Independence Day celebrations

    Ynetnews, Israel
    Oct 18 2009


    Ministers to boycott Turkish Independence Day celebrations


    Many government members invited to party at Turkish ambassador's
    residence later this month plan not to show up on backdrop of recent
    tensions between countries, Ynet learns. Diaspora Minister Edelstein:
    Turks are spitting in our face

    Roni Sofer Published: 10.18.09, 19:58 / Israel News

    Many government ministers who have been invited to celebrate Turkey's
    86th Independence Day later this month at the Turkish ambassador's
    residence in Kfar Shmaryahu, are planning to boycott the event on the
    backdrop of recent tensions between Jerusalem and Ankara, Ynet has
    learned.

    There are those, however, who say that "we must not heat up the
    atmosphere and add fuel to the fire."

    Interior Minister Eli Yishai, who is slated to represent the
    government at the event, is inclined to boycott it or, alternatively,
    show up and deliver a scathing speech.


    Tense Relations

    Turkish president: 'Brave criticism' of Israel to continue / AFP

    Abdullah Gül says his country will not keep silent when Jewish state
    makes mistakes, but adds this is not likely to shake foundations of
    bilateral relations between strategic allies
    Full story

    Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman is not expected to arrive, while
    Defense Minister Ehud Barak has yet to make a decision on the matter.
    President Shimon Peres has refused to say whether he plans to accept
    the Turkish Embassy's invitation or not.

    The event is schedule to take place on October 29. Many ministers have
    wondered whether the invitation was a goodwill gesture on the part of
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government in a bid to
    ease the tension, or whether it is simply routine diplomatic conduct,
    which the ministers are considering boycotting in order to manifest
    the Israeli government's discontent with the Turkish attitude.

    The recent crisis began last week, when Turkey decided to exclude
    Israel from a joint air force drill, and continued with a Turkish TV
    series showing Israeli soldiers deliberately killing Palestinian
    children. On Friday, Turkey voted in favor of adopting the Goldstone
    Report, which accuses Israel of committing war crimes in Gaza, at the
    United Nations' Human Rights Council.

    Lieberman has yet to confirm his arrival, but his associates have said
    he will not take part in the celebration. The foreign minister has
    already boycotted an event organized by the Chinese Embassy, in
    protest of the country's vote at the Human Rights Council. Officials
    at the Foreign Ministry have refused to comment on the matter.

    Barak's office said in a statement that the defense minister has yet
    to make a decision on the matter.

    Deputy Prime Minister Yishai, who is slated to be the senior Israeli
    representative at the Turkish ambassador's party, is inclined to pass
    on the invitation on the backdrop of the series chain of events.
    Another option he is considering is arriving at the ambassador's
    residence and criticizing Ankara's rigid attitude towards the Israeli
    government.


    Edelstein: Don't go
    Information and Diaspora Minister Yuli Edelstein, who has decided not
    to accept the Turkish invitation, told Ynet, "It's unthinkable that
    they are spitting in our face and we are showing, 'Rain, rain.'

    "I have no plans to arrive and I hope my fellow ministers act the same
    way. If the Turks wish to lower the flames, this is not the way to do
    it. For example, they should have voted against adopting the Goldstone
    Report by the UN Human Rights Council, but they chose to act
    differently," he said.

    "I have not heard the Turkish Embassy in Israel condemning the series
    on their state-sponsored TV channel, which shows IDF soldiers shooting
    children and babies," Edelstein said of the controversial television
    program revealed by Ynet. "If the Turks seek to reach the European
    Union, they must understand that they cannot dance on Israel's back
    together with Zimbabwe and Gabon," the minister added, saying his
    conscience does not allow him to take part in the celebrations.

    Industry, Trade and Labor Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, on the other
    hand, plans to arrive at the ambassador's residence.

    "Our relations with Turkey are strategic and we must maintain them at
    any cost," he explained. "Of course I plan to take part in the event I
    have been invited to. We must not heat up the atmosphere and add more
    fuel to the fire.

    "At such moments, the leadership's duty is not to talk from the
    stomach, but to take one step forward," said the minister, who has a
    history of extensive ties with the Turkish authorities.


    Hershkowitz: I won't visit Turkey
    Another minister who strongly opposes any official Israeli
    participation in the Turkish celebration is Science and Technology
    Minister Daniel Hershkowitz. "As long as the Turkish government fails
    to condemn and even encourages the blood libels against IDF soldiers
    and the State of Israel, I have no plans to visit Turkey or its
    embassy in Israel," he said.

    "The Turks' history shows that they can learn about human rights from
    Israel," Hershkowitz added, referring to the Armenian genocide.

    Tourism Minister Stas Misezhnikov has not been invited to the event,
    but said that Ankara must act firmly to prevent expressions of
    incitement and anti-Semitism, as seen on the state-sponsored TV
    channel.

    "Such content inflames hatred and may encourage acts of violence and
    terrorism by extremists against Israeli and Jewish targets," he added.
    "This incitement has no room among countries with full diplomatic
    relations."

    The tourism minister said that he supports the consumer boycotts
    against vacations in Turkey, but explained that Israel views Turkey as
    an important element in the Middle Eastern arena, which could help
    stabilize the region.

    "Both sides have a strategic interest to maintain and strengthen this
    system, and Israel will act accordingly, in accordance with Turkey's
    conduct," he concluded.

    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,734 0,L-3791843,00.html
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