Category: Israel

  • ‘We invest in ourselves – and keep to ourselves’

    ‘We invest in ourselves – and keep to ourselves’

    After 37 years, Turkey remains the world’s only country to recognize Turkish Cyprus or do business with it; but Prime Minister Erdogan is already planning a new campaign to encourage world recognition if an upcoming round of talks with the Greeks does not lead to a resolution of the island’s division.

    Zvi Barel

    By Zvi Bar’el

     

    KYRENIA, CYPRUS – A white marble tablet, marked with the passage of time, stands at the entrance to the mass grave on the outskirts of the village of Murataga in Northern Cyprus. Engraved on it are the words of Archbishop Makarios III, the first president of Cyprus, who in 1964 said: “If Turkey comes to save the Turkish Cypriots, it will not find a single Turkish Cypriot whom it will be able to save.” Eighty-nine of the residents of the village, nearly all of them children, women and elderly people, were not saved from the slaughter carried out by Greek Cypriot soldiers before the Turkish army decided to invade the island on July 20, 1974, in order to thwart the ambition of the ruling military junta in Greece to annex the island to that country.

    Kamil Maric, an impressive man of 64 wearing a T-shirt and baseball cap, was 27 at the time, a prisoner of the Greek Cypriot forces, some of whose colleagues had murdered his wife and 18-month-old son.

     

    Eroglu
    Turkish Cyprus President Eroglu. Photo by: AFP

    “They took 40 bullets out of the boy’s body,” he tells the group of journalists who were invited recently to visit the Turkish part of Cyprus. The occasion was the 37th anniversary of what is called “the Turkish intervention” or “peace mission” there, and in the southern part – invasion and occupation. Back then 150 Turkish Cypriots lived in Murataga, which was surrounded by Greek villages. Most of them were murdered; a few fled to Famagusta or other villages. “Only one couple, he was blind and she was crippled, remained to tell about the horror,” says Maric.

    And what happened to the Greek villages? The locals don’t talk about it now. In Northern Cyprus there is only one tragedy. In the south they tell a different story.

    Turkey is not only the “motherland” of the approximately 250,000 Turkish Cypriots: It is also their only link with the rest of the world, since no country apart from Turkey recognizes the independence of Turkish Cyprus. Whereas about 135 countries are prepared to grant the Palestinians recognition of an independent state, Turkish Cyprus comes up against a wall every time it seeks recognition.

    At Ercan Airport near Lefkosa (which the Greeks call Nicosia ), named after a Turkish combat pilot, the tourist can ask the immigration official not to stamp his passport upon entry, and instead stamp a piece of paper they call a visa. Turkish Cyprus is aware of the difficulties such a stamp could cause a passport-holder, if he wants, for example, to visit Greek Cyprus (the Republic of Cyprus ). Ordinary letters from abroad to an inhabitant of the northern part of the island are sent only via Turkey, ships do not anchor in the ports of Northern Cyprus and no non-Turkish plane lands there.

    “We pay double customs duty and the cost of living here is disproportionately high,” says Rasih Resat, owner and editor of the Haberdar newspaper in Northern Cyprus. Resat speaks English like an Englishman, and has a wry sense of humor and a cynicism ostensibly acquired over many years of frustration. “Merchandise coming from Europe has to go through a Turkish port, where they charge customs duty on it, and then it comes here to Cyprus, where we charge customs duty on it again.”

    The minimum wage in Turkish Cyprus is higher than that in Turkey, about $750 a month. When all exports from the island have to pass through Turkey to reach world markets, thereby making products more costly, it is hard to find even Turkish investors who will agree to build factories in Northern Cyprus.

    “What is left for a Turkish Cypriot manufacturer to do?” asks Resat, and answers: “He can manufacture 150 containers of yogurt and no more, because there is no one to sell to, and he can’t aspire to produce more, to expand his production for the international market. In fact we are going into the third generation of Turkish Cypriots that can’t predict its future. We invest in ourselves, we buy a villa, we buy a BMW – and we keep to ourselves.”

    The only source of optimism for Resat is Europe’s demographic trends, he says: “Europe is growing older, and in a few years there will not be enough workers to maintain its industry. It will need more foreign workers [who will send their earnings home] and maybe then there will be an opening for our future.” Until then, Turkey will continue to provide about one-third of the Turkish Cypriot budget, approximately $400 billion annually.

    ‘Our tomorrow is one’

    We meet in the lobby of the Jasmine Court Hotel on the beach at Kyrenia, the beautiful city where the Turkish forces landed in 1974. The previous day, Resat was invited along with a group of journalists to a meeting in Ankara with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Erdogan – who two days later came to Cyprus as the guest of honor at the celebrations to mark the anniversary of the Turkish “intervention” – wanted to transmit a message to the effect that if there is no progress in the talks between Greek Cyprus and Turkish Cyprus at the meeting planned at the United Nations in October, he will move to Plan B: enlisting international support for recognition of Turkish Cyprus as an independent state.

    “Our yesterday is one, our tomorrow is one and our heartbeat is one,” says the slogan at the bottom of the huge portraits of Erdogan that decorated the streets in advance of the anniversary. Large Turkish flags fly alongside the flag of Turkish Cyprus, and pictures of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, hang in government offices and university classrooms. Turkish Cyprus and Turkey also have the same national anthem – the “Independence March.” The words were written by Turkish poet Mehmet Akif Ersoy in 1921, two years before the founding of the Turkish Republic. The opening lines of the anthem’s 10 stanzas are devoted to “our heroic army,” which was victorious in the War of Independence, and the song is full of expressions of love of the homeland, liberty and power. For many long minutes the guests on the platform of honor erected on one of the main roads of Nicosia stand and sing the entire thing.

    The president of the unrecognized Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, Dervis Eroglu, is greeted by the public with loud cheering as though he were a beloved king. Cypriot generals bedecked with medals and gilded swords belted to their waists, and a large crowd of citizens and journalists rise to their feet and join in the singing of the anthem, amplified through powerful loudspeakers.

    An old friend, an important columnist and former editor of a Turkish newspaper, who volunteers to translate the main points of Erdogan’s long speech for me, breathes a sigh of relief when the announcer – an army officer with a deep bass voice – declares the proceedings will begin. “A folk-dance troupe is better than a military parade,” he comments. And indeed, a small group of men and women in traditional dress perform a series of pleasant dances on the burning-hot asphalt in the 40-degree heat, followed by five paratroopers parachuting and landing perfectly across from the platform of honor.

    But there is also, of course, a military parade. Hundreds of Turkish soldiers wearing helmets and with packs on their backs march in unison, commandos in blue berets salute the guests of honor, and a few tanks, artillery pieces and even Katyusha-carriers also file past. During the whole parade the 73-year-old president, who has already had two coronary bypass operations, stands erect and honors the thousands of soldiers.

    Elmaz, a Turk who moved to Turkish Cyprus seven years ago to earn a living, tells me after the ceremony: “Look how they stand and exalt the Turkish army. Look at how they fawn over the Turks, but they treat me like garbage. They think they are already part of Europe, while we [native] Turks are inferior to them. I came here with my wife and children but they didn’t allow the children to attend school until my wife and I received a residence permit. They know how to take Turkish money but they also know how to stick a knife in our back.”

    “There is something in what he says,” confirms a lecturer at the Eastern Mediterranean University, the largest of the six universities in Turkish Cyprus. “We do feel like a single nation, but among us there are those who are more equal and those who are less equal.”

    The six universities, attended by about 40,000 students from around the world (the language of instruction for foreign students is English ) are the most important source of income in the local economy. Every foreign student pays $7,500 to $9,000 for a year of studies, and many receive scholarships and housing. The problem is that only 150 universities in the world are prepared to cooperate with and give academic recognition to the universities in Turkish Cyprus.

    “Higher education is a matter of right – it shouldn’t be a political issue,” complains the rector of the Eastern Mediterranean University, Prof. Halil Nadiri. He is right, but since Cyprus is a political issue by nature, and Greek Cyprus became a member of the European Union in 2004, the academic struggle of Turkish Cyprus cannot be anything but political.

    The Annan plan

    “It’s impossible to go on like this,” asserts Resat, the newspaper editor. “The knife is already cutting into the bone,” Erdogan declared in his speech. “We are ready for Plan B,” warned the president of Cyprus. Thus it seems everyone is preparing for the next “critical moment” and opportunity – and yet another “last chance,” similar to those that have arisen since the Cypriot state was founded – that will come in October when representatives of Turkish Cyprus and Greek Cyprus will meet with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to decide on the future of the Turkish part of the island.

    Back in April 2004, Ban’s predecessor Kofi Annan proposed a plan on which inhabitants of the two parts of Cyprus voted in a referendum. In essence, it imagined a federal state in which each part of Cyprus would have a government of its own, subordinate to a federal government with a joint presidential council, and a federal supreme court and constitution. Sixty-five percent of the citizens of the Turkish part voted in favor of the plan, and 76 percent of the Greek part voted against.

    In any event, the Greek Cypriots had little to lose by objecting to the UN federation plan; in doing so they showed it would not be to their benefit to share the wealth they have accumulated with their poor, infrastructure-deprived Turkish counterparts on the island. The Greek Cypriots also believed that the reparations offered to them by the UN plan for property over which Turks took possession were not sufficient. They assessed that when they became members of the EU, as they did the following month, they would be able to apply to the European Court of Human Rights and demand far higher compensation.

    The possibility that a relatively large Turkish army will remain on the island until Turkey is accepted as a member of the EU also does not appeal to the government of Greek Cyprus, in Nicosia, which has demanded the withdrawal of the forces in the near future. And thus, in the absence of real sanctions for voting down the 2004 UN plan, and with EU membership, the Greek Cypriots attempted to settle a historical account with their Turkish foes.

    Meanwhile, the EU has spared itself the problems involved in accepting as members an additional population of about a quarter of a million Muslims, and its commitment to the northern part of the island has been a moral one only. Turkey was hoping that a solution to the Cyprus crisis would open a fast track to discussion of its own membership in the EU. Though no such condition has been explicitly stipulated, the question of Cyprus has come up in many forums and has been depicted as a stumbling block that Turkey must eliminate.

    Now Turkey will likely try to explain that the EU should content itself with showing appreciation for various good-will efforts made by Ankara, and see it as a worthy candidate, despite the fact that the status of Turkish Cyprus has not changed. Therein lies the hypocrisy of the EU, which declares it is “eager” to solve the problem of Cyprus and at the same time is slowing down efforts to arrive at a solution – because the moment the Cyprus problem is solved, yet another hurdle will be eliminated from the path of Turkey’s entry into Europe. Then it will no longer be a question of only a quarter of a million Muslim Turkish Cypriots, but rather of about 75 million Muslim Turks.

    Lessons for Israel

    For its part, Israel also does not recognize Turkish Cyprus as an independent state. Indeed, Jerusalem has adopted the international rhetoric that describes Turkish Cyprus as existing on occupied territory, and of being responsible for finding a solution to its status within the framework of the existing situation on the ground on the island, or as part of an agreed-upon resolution at the UN. This view has not impeded several dozen Israeli businesspeople from investing in the northern part of the island and opening a number of tourism sites there.

    In any case, Turkey – as an occupying, invading, liberating country vis-a-vis Cyprus – can teach Israel a lesson when it comes to dealing with abandoned property. The shoreline along the blue sea at Famagusta, with its colorful parasols and vacationers paddling in the water, is crossed by a scary barbed-wire fence behind which is a tall iron wall preventing entry into the ghost town of Varosha. Beyond the wall, on which Turkish soldiers are stationed to prevent the entry of outsiders, are visible high-rise residential buildings, what once was the Sheraton Hotel, and even parts of tree-lined neighborhoods. The Greek inhabitants of Varosha abandoned it in a panic when the Turkish army arrived. There are stories of inhabitants even leaving behind eating utensils on their tables and towels in their bathrooms.

    Turkey decided to keep this town as a “deposit”: not to build a settlement or bring Turkish civilians there. Turkey even invited the Greek inhabitants of the town to return, reestablish their businesses and live there; they refused to do so until a comprehensive solution is achieved.

    If a diplomatic solution to the Cyprus problem is found, promises Turkey, the Greek inhabitants will be able to return whenever they want. Until then, the Turkish army will continue to guard the town.

    “I am certain that if Israel had occupied the town, it would have turned it into a tourism site or a settlement, about which you would say, ‘This is another fact on the ground, and there is nothing to be done about it,’” laughs Sinan, a Turkish journalist who accompanies the group (and requested that his full name not be published ).

    “We are taking every possible step to prove that our intentions are good,” the president of Turkish Cyprus explains to me. “We accepted the Annan plan, we are paying reparations and are prepared to come to a property agreement. But we cannot possibly agree to a provision that says the Greek owners will decide what solution there will be for their [abandoned] property. What will we do with the houses Turkish Cypriots are already living in? We are prepared to pay compensation, but we will not allow the Greek owners to determine that residential buildings should be demolished only because they are the [legal] owners. It is also necessary to consider the people who are living in those buildings.”

    The Greek right of return, it emerges, also has its “red lines,” but there is no dispute that such a right exists – yet another lesson that can be learned from Cyprus.

    On the way back from Famagusta we pass through Nicosia along the border between the two parts of the island. The narrow streets of the capital, its low buildings, remnants of the attractive colonial architectural design, lovely lemon trees, palm trees and pines – all of this makes one forget for a moment that this is a border of loathing and hatred. Even though Turks can now cross to the other side and vice versa, passage of goods is still prohibited.

    A week before our visit a power station on the Greek side blew up and the Turkish Cypriot government hastened to offer to help with the supply of electricity. An agreement was signed, but during our trip, the Greek archbishop‘s harsh view of the subject was published. “It is better,” he ruled, “to live by candlelight than to import electricity from the Turks.” He also called upon Greek citizens not to purchase cheeses and other products from the Turkish side of Cyprus.

    Thus, the political conflict between the two parts of the island will perhaps be solved on paper, but how many generations will it take for the difficult memories to be totally forgotten?

    www.haaretz.com, 05.08.11

  • Syrian question sets Turkey and Iran apart

    Syrian question sets Turkey and Iran apart

    Japan TimesBy SHLOMO BEN-AMI

    MADRID — Whether the Arab Spring will usher in credible democracies across the Arab world or not remains uncertain. But while the dust has not yet settled after months of turmoil in Tunis, Cairo and elsewhere, the Arab revolts have already had a massive impact on the strategic structure of the Middle East.

    Until recently, the region was divided into two camps: an incoherent and weakened moderate Arab alignment, and an “axis of resistance,” formed by Iran, Syria, Hamas and Hezbollah against American and Israeli designs for the region.

    Driven by a strategy of “zero problems” with its neighbors,” Turkey’s quest for a leading role in Middle East politics brought it closer to Syria and Iran.

    The Arab Spring exposed the fragile foundations upon which the entire axis of resistance was built, and has pushed it to the brink of collapse.

    The first to opt out was Hamas. Fearful of the consequences of the demise of its patrons in Damascus, Hamas tactically withdrew from the axis and let Egypt lead it toward reconciliation with the pro-Western Palestinian Authority on terms that it had refused under former Egyptian Hosni Mubarak.

    Turkey is genuinely interested in a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian dispute in a regional system of peace and security, whereas Iran and Hezbollah are bent on derailing both in order to deny Israel the kind of peace with the Arab world that would end up isolating Iran.

    Notwithstanding its bitter conflict with Israel, Turkey, unlike Iran, is not an unconditional enemy of the Jewish state, and would not discard an accommodation with Benjamin Netanyahu’s government. Indeed, talks are now under way between the parties to restore more normal relations.

    Nor do Iran and Turkey share a common vision with regard to the strategically sensitive Persian Gulf region. Turkey, whose 2008 treaty with the Gulf Cooperation Council made it a strategic partner of the region’s monarchies, was unequivocally assertive during the Bahrain crisis in warning Iran to cease its subversive intrusion into the region’s affairs. The stability and territorial integrity of the Persian Gulf States is a strategic priority for Turkey; that is clearly not the case for Iran.

    Similarly, when it comes to Lebanon, Turkey certainly does not share Iran’s concern about the possible interruption of Hezbollah’s lifeline should the Syrian regime collapse. And Iran and Syria, for their part, have never been too happy with Prime Minister’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s aspirations to act as a broker in Lebanon, which they consider to be their strategic backyard.

    This explains Hezbollah’s rejection of a Turkish-Qatari initiative to act as mediators after the fall of Saad Hariri’s Lebanese government in January.

    Turkey’s commitment to peaceful democratic transitions in the Arab world has alienated it from its Syrian ally, Bashar al-Assad — with whose repressive practices both Iran and Hezbollah are fully complicit — and is now driving Iran and Turkey even further apart.

    Iran is working to ensure that free elections open the way to truly Islamic regimes in the Arab world, while Turkey assumes that its own political brand, a synthesis of Islam and democracy with secular values, should ultimately prevail.

    The rift reflects not only ideological differences, but also disagreement about the objective of regime change. Iran expects the new regimes to rally behind it in radically changing the region’s strategic equation through a policy of confrontation with the U.S. and Israel, while Turkey expects the new regimes to follow constructive policies of peace and security.

    Instability and confusion in the Arab world serve the agenda of a radically nonstatus quo power such as Iran. Instability has the potential to keep oil prices high, benefiting the Iranian economy. Moreover, with the West focused on the formidable challenges posed by the Arab revolts, Iran finds it easier to divert the world’s attention from its nuclear program, and to circumvent the international sanctions regime designed to curtail its efforts to acquire nuclear weapons.

    Turkey’s foreign policy, unlike Iran’s, needs a stable environment to prosper. Instability undermines its entire regional vision; it certainly challenges its idealistic strategy of “zero problems.” It also puts at risk Turkey’s robust economic penetration into Arab markets. And with the Kurdish problem as alive as ever, the Turks also know only too well that upheavals in neighboring countries can spill over into Turkey itself.

    It is on the Syrian question that the differences between Turkey and Iran are especially apparent. Turkey has practically resigned itself to the inevitable demise of Syria’s repressive Baath regime.

    For Iran and its Hezbollah clients, the fall of Assad would be nothing short of a calamity — one with far-reaching consequences.

    Devoid of its Syrian alliance and estranged from Turkey, Iran would become an isolated revolutionary power whose fanatical brand of Islam is repellent to most Arab societies.

    Turkey was wrong to try to gain wider influence in the Middle East by working with the region’s revolutionary forces. It is far wiser for Turkey to make common cause with the region’s responsible forces.

    A democratic Egypt would certainly be a more reliable partner. Egypt has already managed to draw Hamas away from Syria into an inter-Palestinian reconciliation.

    Instead of competing for the role of regional power broker, as Mubarak did, Egypt can join forces with Turkey — whose officials the Egyptians wisely invited to the ceremony that sealed the Palestinian reconciliation — to promote an Israeli-Arab peace and a civilized security system in the Middle East.

    Shlomo Ben-Ami is a former Israeli foreign minister who now serves as vice president of the Toledo International Center for Peace. He is the author of “Scars of War, Wounds of Peace: The Israeli-Arab Tragedy.” © 2011 Project Syndicate

    japantimes.co.jp, Aug. 8, 2011

  • It’s not easy to say ‘I’m sorry’

    It’s not easy to say ‘I’m sorry’

    jpost logoJPost.com > Opinion > Op-Ed Contributors

    By BARRY LEFF

    For the people of a religion that places a huge premium on peace, we need Turkey more than Turkey needs us.

    Why should Israel apologize to Turkey over the Mavi Marmara incident? After all, the forthcoming report from the UN’s Palmer Commission is widely expected to say Israel’s blockade of Gaza is legal under international law, and that the Turkish government’s involvement with the flotilla was inappropriate.

    Shouldn’t we insist that Turkey apologize to us? There are several reasons why we should apologize nonetheless.

    First of all, the Palmer report is also widely expected to be critical of the IDF’s behavior, claiming it acted too soon. While an internal Israeli military investigation said the deaths of the nine people on board the Mavi Marmara were justified, it also said the operation was “plagued by errors of planning, intelligence and coordination.” It would appear likely that if the operation had been better planned, loss of life could have been reduced or eliminated.

    Any unnecessary loss of life should be reason enough to apologize.

    FROM THE perspective of Jewish tradition, our responsibility to apologize – and more, to seek forgiveness – is not dependent on whether the other party apologizes. We are responsible for our actions, whether or not someone we wronged takes responsibility for the wrongs they inflicted on us.

    Furthermore, we should apologize because it will further the cause of peaceful relations with our neighbors.

    The Marmara incident has severely damaged relations with Turkey, once a key ally. Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan has said “Normalization of relations between the two countries is unthinkable unless Israel apologizes for this illegal act…” Some might say it would be wrong to apologize if the apology is not 100% sincere: after all, the Torah cautions us to “stay far from a false matter.” Wouldn’t it be a “false matter” to apologize if we believe we are the ones who were wronged? Fortunately, God Himself seems to approve of the need to fudge the truth a little bit sometimes in the interests of diplomacy. For the sake of shalom bayit, domestic peace, God did not reveal to Abraham exactly what Sarah said when she was told she would become pregnant.

    For the people of a religion that places a huge premium on peace – we greet each other with “peace,” we pray for peace three times a day, one of God’s names is peace – we certainly seem to be struggling to achieve that desired state.

    And in our pursuit of peace, we need Turkey more than Turkey needs us.

    ONCE UPON a time, Turkey did serve as a bridge between Israel and the Islamic world. It is not only a fact of geography that Turkey straddles both Europe and Asia, but it’s also an aspectof its national identity. Even though Turkey’s bid for membership in the EU seems to be stalled for the moment, the fact that this Muslim nation is a serious candidate speaks volumes about its potential to be a bridge between East and West. Israel needs all the friends in the Islamic world that it can get.

    Whether it is between friends or family members, or a matter of relations between nations, being the first to apologize is difficult. It is not easy to apologize when you feel you have been wronged. That is a reason so many family feuds go on for years. “Me, apologize? No way! He (or she) needs to apologize first!” It is both proper for Israel to take responsibility for its actions, regardless of what others do, and in our enlightened self-interest. Acting wisely in this instance will further our national interests much more than displaying righteous indignation, no matter how justified.

    The writer is a business executive and rabbi. He serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Rabbis for Human Rights. Opinions expressed here are his own.

    www.jpost.com, 07.08.2011

  • Why the press is ignoring Israel’s protests

    Why the press is ignoring Israel’s protests

    When news doesn’t concern the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, foreign papers have little interest in the Jewish state

    Israelis March On
    Israelis march with a stretcher with a person wearing a mask of Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a protest in central Tel Aviv, Saturday, July 30, 2011
    This article originally appeared on GlobalPost.

    TEL AVIV, Israel — As Israel wound its way toward a fourth week of social protests, which have been steadily growing, some on the ground began to ask if anyone in the international arena was paying attention.

    Ami Kaufman, a blogger on the left-wing opinion site 972mag.com, returned home from the 150,000-man march in Tel Aviv Saturday night and published a post entitled, “So suddenly Israel isn’t a story anymore?”

    “I checked my usual two international papers, the New York Times and the Guardian sites. But there was nothing. Oh well, might be too early. I’ll check in the morning. This morning, 7 hours after the demo ended, 10 hours after it began, nothing to be found on the homepages of both respectable outlets. Not a word,” Kaufman wrote.

    For good and for bad, Israelis are accustomed to being in the news. Similarly, the 800 to 1,000-strong foreign press corps stationed in Jerusalem (it is second in size only to that in Washington, DC) is accustomed to hoarding the headlines.

    But when local news does not touch on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, journalists whose daily bread and butter has for years been conflict-oriented, appear to be at loose ends.

    “Nothing is going on,” says Reina BenHabib, correspondent for Colombia’s 24-hour news channel npn24. “Well, nothing anyone is interested in.”

    “There’s the feeling that they’re looking at this disproportionately as a non-story much in the way they disproportionately cover any little Israeli-Palestinian triviality,” said Foreign Ministry Spokesman Yigal Palmor.

    Joel Greenberg of the Washington Post differed, saying the previously “minor” interest exhibited by the foreign media has now been “superseded by events. It changed after Saturday’s rally.”

    Possibly any change is due to the fact that the Netanyahu-led government still seems to be utterly at a loss.

    As some of the protest leaders began for the first time to cautiously articulate more explicitly political complaints, such as the amount of money going to Israeli special interests like settlements and the ultra-orthodox populations, rather than to the general economy, a dozen right-wing lawmakers, trying to scramble, suggested Netanyahu could solve the nation’s housing crisis by building more rental units in the West Bank.

    The 20th day of ongoing and expanding social protests was a news-filled one. Israel’s president, Shimon Peres, got personally involved in attempting to bring the government and the fragmented but passionate groups leading the protests together for talks. Protest leaders acquiesced to the presidential pleading and, in preparation, met in Tel Aviv to formulate a list of demands. Meanwhile, they announced a massive demonstration for Aug. 6. They are hoping to draw one million protesters onto the streets of this nation of just 7 million.

    After ignoring him for weeks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Israel Medical Association Chairman Dr. Leonid Eidelman and begged him to call off his hunger strike, now in its second week. Eidelman refused pending a solution to the crisis surrounding underpaid and overworked public hospital doctors.

    Claudio Pagliara, a correspondent for the Italian television network RAI, and, with eight years under his belt in Jerusalem, an informal dean of the foreign press corps, said Netanyahu had it coming to him.

    “I was expecting this for quite some time,” he said. “I’d ask myself, ‘why don’t they go to the street?’ We are talking about the people who have made Israel the economic and security success it is. These are young, hardworking people, high-tech guys, educated people, and the fruits of their labor go to minority interests that basically have been blackmailing this country for years. The ultra-orthodox and the settlers aren’t a majority in this country. But because of party calculations, politicians are completely beholden to them. So you have these hardworking, super-successful guys, and they have to send their kids to classes with 40 kids in them. That’s not the way a prosperous country is supposed to work.”

    For Pagliara, part of the fascination with Israel’s unrest is borne out of Italy’s dire economic predicament. Unemployment in Israel stands at 5.7 percent. In Italy, it is at 10 percent, but among young workers unemployment is at an astonishing 30 percent.

    “The Israeli situation is a dream for Italians. A dream,” Pagliara said. “But here they feel differently. They feel their future is not going in the right direction.”

    In a statement Monday, Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fisher, who is hailed as a miracle worker for safeguarding Israel’s economic growth as the rest of the world was roiled by the economic crisis, cited a feeling of “surprise” at the force for the protests.

    “Economic indicators are excellent. Unemployment hasn’t been this low since 1972,” he said.

    Pagliara managed to make the story interesting for his editors by selling it as “the Israeli side of the Arab Spring.”

    “There is no demand for freedom in the Israeli tent cities, of course,” he said. “But it is the same generation of protesters, the 30-year-old, educated, middle-class, hardworking, Facebook users. It’s the common points that fascinate me.”

    A senior Israeli official objected.

    “To look at this and say that after the Arab Spring there is the Israeli Summer makes me laugh. It is not to understand what is going on here. Even the Arab Spring itself is not a homogenous thing. Who is writing about the gradual reforms of Morroco’s king? Or about the lack of any protests in Iraq? No one wants to touch it. You can’t compare the nature of our protests to what is going on in Arab countries.”

    For one man, Yigal Palmor, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, there is a silver lining.

    “From a purely egocentric point of you, it’s been great. I have time to read mail and organize papers because journalists have been leaving me alone. Of course I’m interested as a citizen. But since its not perceived as strategic news I can read it like anyone else with an opinion. But I’m not working on it.”

    www.salon.com, AUG 3, 2011

  • Israel concerned over resignations of key Turkish army officials

    Israel concerned over resignations of key Turkish army officials

    JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israeli officials reportedly are concerned over the resignation of the head of the Turkish armed forces and three other senior officers.

    “This move plays right into the hands of Islamic extremists and Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan,” an unnamed official told the Ynet Israeli news service, citing unnamed officials.

    The official called the July 29 resignations “troubling because it means the last fortress against Islam has collapsed.”

    Officials told Ynet that the turmoil in Turkey could hurt any possibility of reaching an agreement between Turkey and Israel on the Palmer Report dealing with the deadly 2010 flotilla raid that led to the deaths of nine Turkish activists, including a Turkish American, aboard the Mavi Marmara.

    The resignations reportedly came following tensions between the officers and Erdogan over the army’s demand that dozens of officers held on suspicion of involvement in an alleged anti-government plot be promoted.

    www.jta.org, 31 July 2011

  • ‘In Turkey, they call me Ahmet the Israeli’

    ‘In Turkey, they call me Ahmet the Israeli’

    ‘In Turkey, they call me Ahmet the Israeli’

    The chairman of Turkey’s Yilmazlar construction firm says his company is an innocent victim of the Turkish-Israeli dispute.

    A giant Turkish flag, Istanbul, July 17, 2011.  Photo by: Reuters
    A giant Turkish flag, Istanbul, July 17, 2011. Photo by: Reuters

    Ahmet Reyiz Yilmaz loves Israel.

    “I’ve worked in Israel half my life,” said the chairman of Yilmazlar, the large Turkish construction company that is the only Turkish firm with a permit to operate here. “I have an apartment in Israel and my children sing songs in Hebrew.”

    He also sponsors the Hapoel Abu Gosh-Mevasseret Zion soccer team.

    “I don’t need a kashrut certificate from anyone to prove I love Israel,” he said.

    Now Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman wants to revoke the work permits of the company’s 800 construction workers. Yilmaz says he and his company are being victimized because of the bad blood between Israel and Turkey over the past two years.

    “You know what they call me in Turkey? Ahmet the Israeli,” he said. “And here they are attacking me for being anti-Israel. It’s absurd.”

    During the 17 years Yilmazlar has been operating in Israel, it has built residential projects and numerous public buildings, including the Defense Ministry headquarters in Tel Aviv’s Kirya, parts of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and new wings at Hadassah University Hospital in Jerusalem.

    The firm obtained the contracts and the work permits under a defense agreement with Turkey, under which Israel refurbishes Turkish tanks and in return allows Turkish construction workers to work in Israel.

    Last year, an Israeli court suspended payments to Yilmazlar while the company was working out a financial dispute with the Mashab construction company. Yilmaz says his company was being targeted due to Turkey’s involvement in last year’s flotilla to the Gaza Strip.

    The legal issues were resolved, but criticism of Yilmaz continued, particularly after he set up a right-wing party in Turkey, MMP – which he now says he has quit “because I found out that politics doesn’t interest me.” Nevertheless, the party still lists him as its president, and it issued a statement yesterday saying that “Lieberman the fascist has made Yilmaz his next target.”

    “I oppose [Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip] Erdogan’s polices and believe it is forbidden to conduct a dialogue with Hamas,” Yilmaz said. “Hamas is a terror organization, and no one understands better than me how much Israelis suffered from Hamas terror.”

    via ‘In Turkey, they call me Ahmet the Israeli’ – Haaretz Daily Newspaper | Israel News.