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ANKARA: Turkey Wants To Repair Israeli Ties, Say Experts

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Wants To Repair Israeli Ties, Say Experts

    TURKEY WANTS TO REPAIR ISRAELI TIES, SAY EXPERTS

    Hurriyet
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=turkish-presence-at-holocaust-meet-in-israel-hailed-as-gesture-2010-12-29
    Dec 29 2010
    Turkey

    A high-level Turkish diplomat's attendance and participation
    in a Holocaust meeting in Israel this month is a good sign for
    Turkish-Israeli relations, according to experts. Turkish officials have
    downplayed the meeting, saying the decision to send a representative
    to the international meeting had more to do with Turkey's stance on
    genocide than with trying to fix bilateral ties

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. AP photo

    Turkey dispatched a senior diplomat to attend a Holocaust meeting in
    Israel this month, a move some observers saw as a diplomatic gesture
    to repair severely strained ties between the longtime allies.

    "The government has taken a good step. We don't have an ambassador
    in Israel, but we have an embassy; that means our relations with the
    country continue," former Turkish Foreign Ministry diplomat İlter
    Turkmen told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review, saying the
    Turkish presence at the meeting in Haifa was a "gesture" from Ankara
    to Tel Aviv.

    "The presence shows normal relations are continuing," Turkmen said.

    Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Selcuk Unal said Wednesday that
    the country's "participation in the meeting is in line with Turkey's
    principles on the issues of racism, xenophobia and genocide," adding
    that the meeting was not a bilateral one and the Turkish presence
    should not be seen as a diplomatic gesture to Israel.

    Turkish diplomat Ertan Tezgör participated as an observer in the Dec.

    13-16 meeting in Haifa, which was organized by the International
    Holocaust Task Force, or ITF, Unal said.

    Tezgör's attendance at the meeting was warmly welcomed in Israeli
    diplomatic circles, where it was seen as a positive step.

    "We are very much pleased with Turkey's participation," Israeli
    Embassy spokesman Amit Zarouk told the Daily News.

    Analysts speaking with the Daily News agreed with former diplomat
    Turkmen that the dispatching of Tezgör to the Holocaust meeting
    was an attempt to mend fences with Tel Aviv. "Turkey does not want
    to dismantle all its bridges with Israel and it cannot do so," said
    Professor Huseyin Bagcı of Middle East Technical University in Ankara.

    "The relations between Turkey and Israel are exceeding the Turkish
    prime minister and the foreign minister," Bagcı said. "Turkish-Israeli
    relations cannot be minimized to the ruling Justice and Development
    Party [AKP]. They have political, cultural and historical aspects."

    Turkey previously declared it would not boycott Israel at international
    platforms despite the setback in the bilateral relationship following
    Israel's deadly May 31 attack on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla. In
    an exception to this statement, Ankara refused in October to send
    any delegation to a tourism conference held by the Organization for
    Economic Cooperation and Development in Jerusalem due specifically to
    the situation in that city. European countries including Spain and
    Britain also shunned the tourism conference, arguing the gathering
    would lend international legitimacy to Israel's claim to the entire
    Holy City as its capital.

    Turkish participation in the Haifa event was not a surprise, according
    to Sabri Sayarı of Istanbul's private Sabancı University, who said
    the Turkish government was doing its best to show up at meetings
    dealing with the Holocaust, genocide or anti-Semitism.

    "I don't consider this visit as an attempt to normalize relations but
    rather to make Turkey's case stronger in the face of Armenian genocide
    allegations," Sayarı said, referring to Ankara's attempts to block
    European and U.S. legislative resolutions recognizing Armenian claims
    of genocide.

    Turkish-Israeli relations are deadlocked, Sayarı said, adding that
    the ties would either become frozen or the two sides would find a
    way out of the current crisis.

    Ankara insists the Israeli government deliver an apology and
    compensation after the death of eight Turks and one U.S. citizen of
    Turkish descent in the Israeli commando raid on the aid flotilla. On
    Tuesday, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Turkey's expectations
    from Israel in order to normalize relations remained the same.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday ruled out making
    an apology to Turkey over the raid. "We will not apologize but [will]
    express our regrets to Turkey," Netanyahu said in an interview with
    private television network Channel 10. The Israeli leader's comments
    came a day after his right-wing Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman
    vowed Tel Aviv would not apologize to Turkey for the May 31 raid.

    Davutoglu declined to comment on the statements made by Israeli
    government officials, saying Turkey's stance is open and clear.

    "There has been no change [in our attitude]," he told reporters
    in Ankara, adding that Turkey is determined to take any measures
    necessary to protect its citizens' rights.

    The ITF is an intergovernmental body whose purpose is to rally
    the support of political and social leaders behind the need for
    Holocaust education, remembrance and research, both nationally and
    internationally. Initiated by Swedish Prime Minister Göran Persson
    in 1998, the task force currently has 28 member states.




    From: A. Papazian
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