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ANKARA: Turkey Welcomes Palestine's ICC Membership

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Welcomes Palestine's ICC Membership

    TURKEY WELCOMES PALESTINE'S ICC MEMBERSHIP

    Anadolu Agency, Turkey
    April 9 2015

    'The Israel-Palestine problem should be resolved in a comprehensive
    manner, and the peace process should be reactivated,' Foreign
    Ministry says.

    ANKARA (AA) -Turkey has welcomed Palestine's official membership to
    the International Criminal Court at The Hague.

    In remarks made at the weekly press briefing Thursday, Turkish Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgic said: "This decision of Palestine
    should be considered within the framework of sovereignty principle
    and must be respected."

    Palestine automatically joined the Rome Statute on April 1 two months
    after the country filed its membership request at the UN. Palestine
    can now request to have Israeli leaders referred to the court for
    alleged war crimes committed on Palestinian soil.

    "The Israel-Palestine problem should be resolved in a comprehensive
    and persistent manner, and the peace process should be reactivated,"
    Bilgic said.

    He urged United Nations Security Council members and the international
    community to fulfil their obligations over the issue.

    Israel occupied East Jerusalem during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. It
    later annexed the historic city of Jerusalem in 1980, claiming it as
    the capital of the self-proclaimed Jewish state in a move that has
    never been officially recognized by the international community.

    Palestinians accuse Israel of waging an aggressive campaign to
    "Judaize" the city with the aim of effacing its Arab and Islamic
    identity, and ultimately driving out its Palestinian inhabitants.

    The spokesman also spoke about last week's evacuation operations to
    save Turkish people trapped in Yemen, saying "a total of 48 Turks
    remain in Yemen right now; 36 in Sana'a and 12 in Aden."

    Bilgic also mentioned that some Turks had "willfully" decided to stay
    put in Yemen.

    A total of 230 people, including Turkish citizens, were flown to
    Istanbul on Sunday from Yemen, which has been in turmoil since
    September, when the Houthi militia overran the Yemeni capital of
    Sana'a.

    Several Arab states have joined the Saudi-led offensive in Yemen,
    which began on March 25 with a string of airstrikes on Houthi militia
    positions.

    Bilgic touched upon the issue of foreigners joining militant groups
    in Syria and Iraq. He said a workshop meeting to tackle the issue
    was held in Istanbul on April 7 under the co-chairmanship of the
    Netherlands and Turkey.

    When asked about the upcoming so-called "Armenian genocide motions"
    to be voted in the European Parliament and in the Netherlands, Bilgic
    said Turkish authorities had conveyed Turkey's concerns to the head
    of European Parliament, Martin Schulz.

    "Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has already said that no parliament
    can have a resolution on the issue and explained that this must be
    left to historians," he said.

    He also said that Turkish-origin people in the Netherlands too had
    spoken against such a move and gave their message to the Dutch Foreign
    Minister Bart Koenders that such a resolution was not in the interest
    of its government.

    The 1915 incidents took place during World War I when a portion of
    the Armenian population living in the Ottoman Empire sided with the
    invading Russians and revolted against the empire.

    A decision by the Ottoman Empire to relocate Armenians in eastern
    Anatolia followed the revolts and there were some Armenian casualties
    during the relocation process.

    Armenia has demanded an apology and compensation, while Turkey
    officially refutes Armenian allegations over the incidents, saying
    that, although Armenians died during relocations, many Turks also
    lost their lives in attacks carried out by Armenian gangs in Anatolia.

    The debate and differing opinions between the present day Turkish
    government and the Armenian diaspora, along with the current
    administration in Yerevan, still generates political tension between
    Turks and Armenians.


    From: Baghdasarian
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