Category: Israel

  • Body of El Al Turkey manager found in Sarıyer park

    Body of El Al Turkey manager found in Sarıyer park

    ISTANBUL – Daily News with Wires

    Cohen’s death is most likely a suicide, the inspectors say. DHA photo

    Cohen's death is most likely a suicide, the inspectors say. DHA photo
    Cohen's death is most likely a suicide, the inspectors say. DHA photo

    The regional general manager for Israeli airline El Al has been found dead in a car in the Belgrad Forest in the Istanbul district of Sarıyer.

    Police reported that the airline’s Turkey general manager, Mosche Cohen, had committed suicide by shooting himself in the head, Anatolia news agency reported Friday.

    The investigating teams said that the fingerprints on the gun, an examination of Cohen’s hands and an inspection of the car’s ceiling had made it almost certain that the cause of death was suicide.

    According to recent allegations, Cohen was deeply depressed because of his high debts and was secretly involved with a company that was trading in seafood. It was claimed that the car in which he committed suicide also belonged to the unknown seafood company.

    Cohen was found dead Thursday night. Investigators reported that the El Al general manager had received no phone calls after 1 p.m.

    A note addressed to his family was found on Cohen’s body, apologizing for the act. “I’m sorry, my dear wife and daughter. I couldn’t be a good husband and father for you. Feeling lonely, I couldn’t escape my depression. I love you. Wish I could be there,” said Cohen.

    The gun and the note found on Cohen was sent to a police laboratory for an examination, while the Forensic Medicine Institute will perform an autopsy on the body.

    Cohen will reportedly be buried Sunday at a Jewish cemetary in Istanbul’s Beyoğlu district.

  • Israeli Parliament to Discuss Turkey’s Demands Over Activists Killings

    Israeli Parliament to Discuss Turkey’s Demands Over Activists Killings

    131210 inga tartistiIsraeli lawmakers are expected to convene on Wednesday in a parliamentary session to discuss Turkey’s demand for an official apology and compensation for relatives of the victims who were killed in Israel’s raid on a Gaza-bound aid flotilla.

    A Knesset committee has agreed over a general discussion of the issue after a proposal by Likud lawmaker Dani Danon who strongly rejected any such move as “giving in to terrorism and motivation for similar future attacks.”

    Coalition partner Likud’s Zaev Elkin has also criticized the Israeli cabinet for making no decision on Turkey’s demand and failing to clarify its official position.

    Israeli commandos killed last May eight Turks and a U.S.-Turkish citizen in the raid on Mavi Marmara ship, lead vessel of the aid flotilla. Turkey has demanded an apology and compensation for the attack.

    Yosef Ciechanover, Israel’s representative on the UN panel investigating the flotilla incident, and Feridun Sinirlioglu, a senior Turkish diplomat met twice last week in Geneva after Turkey sent two fire-fighting planes to help put out Carmel blaze that killed 43 people.

    Israel’s top diplomat Avigdor Lieberman and Defense Minister Ehud Barak as well as a number of Israeli politicians and senior military personnel have publicly expressed their opposition to meeting Turkey’s demands.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly said relations with Israel could not go back to normal unless an official apology was made and relatives of the victims were paid redress.

    AA

  • Dictionary can resolve Israel-Turkey row

    Dictionary can resolve Israel-Turkey row

    Official: Dictionary can resolve Israel-Turkey row

    erdogan1Hurriyet quotes sources as saying further talks possible in bid to resolve crisis over Gaza flotilla raid; Israeli source says reconciliation possible if different word for ‘apology’ can be found

    Ynet

    Published:  12.09.10, 00:02 / Israel News

    This week’s reconciliation talks between Israel and Turkey, which were held in Geneva, concluded without an agreement, but diplomatic circles are not ruling out further talks to resolve the differences, Hurriyet reported Wednesday.

    Reconciliation Efforts

    Turkish official: Fire diplomacy boosts Israel ties  / Roee Nahmias

    Israeli, Turkish reps meet for second time in Geneva in bid to mend relations following Turkish assistance during Carmel blaze. Officials in Ankara say Lieberman trying to block reconciliation process

    Full Story

    The Turkish daily quoted sources as saying that the door for reconciliation remains open if the right formula can be found for an Israeli apology over the May 31 commando raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla, which left nine Turkish citizens dead.

    An Israeli apology is a key Turkish condition for reconciliation.

    “If Turkey and Israel want to reach an agreement, they only need to open the Webster’s Dictionary to find a different word for ‘apology,’” a senior Israeli official was quoted by Hurriyet as saying.

    According to the report, Israel is known to prefer to use the words “regret” or “sorry” instead of “apology” because “both its government and its people consider the dispatching of ships by the Turkish Humanitarian Relief Foundation, or İHH, to break Israel’s blockade on the Gaza Strip to be a provocative act.”

    The Yedioth Ahronoth daily said Israel has agreed to pay the families of those killed during the raid $100,000 each.

    On Tuesday Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, “There is no such distinction as ‘the people’ or ‘the state.’ They (Israelis) must apologize to the Republic of Turkey.”

    Hurriyet further reported that Israeli Ambassador to Turley Gabby Levy has asked that his term not be extended, in part due to the publication of American cables by WikiLeaks. In a cable sent last year by then-US envoy to Ankara James Jeffrey, Levy is quoted as saying about Erdoğan: “He’s a fundamentalist. He hates us religiously.”

    via Official: Dictionary can resolve Israel-Turkey row – Israel News, Ynetnews.

  • Turkey and Israel Seek to Repair Ties

    Turkey and Israel Seek to Repair Ties

    JERUSALEM — Officials from Israel and Turkey said Friday that their governments were working on an agreement to end the hemorrhaging of their relationship but were stuck on several issues, including whether Israel must apologize — or merely express regret — for the killings of nine Turks during a flotilla raid in May.

    “We are trying to get a compromise formula,” Ron Dermer, a close aide to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, said on Israel Radio last week.

    The deaths of the nine Turks, one of whom was also an American citizen, occurred aboard a Turkish-sponsored flotilla seeking to break Israel’s embargo of Gaza. Israeli naval commandos boarded the largest of the ships in international waters and, facing violent resistance from dozens of activists, took it by force.

    Once Israel’s closest Muslim ally, Turkey, whose government has moderate Islamist leanings, recalled its ambassador from Israel after the flotilla raid and has recently strengthened ties with Syria and Iran.

    But a forest fire in Israel’s north a week ago led Mr. Netanyahu to seek international help, and Turkey quickly sent two firefighting planes. Mr. Netanyahu made a point of thanking the Turks, visiting their pilots and reminding them of the help Israel offered Turkey after its 1999 earthquake. Turkish news coverage of the firefighting and of Israel’s warm welcome showed Israel in a far more sympathetic light than usual. The Israelis believed that this might be a moment to improve ties, and Mr. Netanyahu called Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey for their first ever conversation.

    “There is a new atmosphere in terms of reconciliation with Israel,” Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu of Turkey said.

    An Israeli official met in Geneva with an official in the Turkish Foreign Ministry and contacts have continued.

    Ozdem Sanberk, Turkey’s envoy to the United Nations inquiry into the raid, said, “The importance of the meeting in Geneva was that it showed the willingness of both Israel and Turkey to leave this chapter behind.”

    Mr. Erdogan has said publicly that Turkey would not return its ambassador to Israel until Turkey received compensation for the families of the dead and an apology. He has also spoken of the need to end Israel’s embargo of Gaza but has not made that a condition of improved ties.

    Israeli officials say that they are willing to pay compensation and express sorrow over what happened, but they have two concerns. They want it spelled out that the commandos who boarded the flotilla were acting in self-defense. And they want whatever deal emerges to end the United Nations inquiry and other international legal actions.

    Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting from Istanbul.

    via Turkey and Israel Seek to Repair Ties – NYTimes.com.

  • Turkey still wants apology and compensation from Israel

    Turkey still wants apology and compensation from Israel

    Istanbul – Turkey was still expecting a formal apology and compensation from Israel over the Gaza flotilla incident, the country’s Foreign Ministry said Friday.

    The statement came even after Israeli and Turkish diplomats met in Geneva this week in a bid to repair the diplomatic crisis between the two countries.

    ‘Israel has behaved unjustly towards Turkey regarding the aid ship Mavi Marmara and we are still expecting compensation and an apology,’ Turkey’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Selcuk Unal said, according to the semi-official Anatolia Agency.

    His statement echoed similar recent comments by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul.

    The diplomatic crisis was sparked by Israel’s assault on a flotilla headed to Gaza in May, during which Israeli commandos shot dead nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists onboard the Turkish Mavi Marmara.

    In the wake of the incident, Turkey recalled its ambassador to Israel and demanded an official apology and compensation. Israel refused to apologise, saying it had acted in self-defence.

    After months of strained relations between the formerly close allies, Yosef Ciechanover, Israel’s representative to the United Nations commission investigating the flotilla deaths, and Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu held meetings in Geneva on Sunday and Monday to try to solve the crisis – the first such bilateral encounter since July.

    The Geneva meetings came about after Turkey sent two planes to Israel to help fight a recent forest fire, which killed 42 Israelis and burnt 50 square kilometres of land.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally thanked Erdogan for the assistance and said he hoped it would be the beginning of a new page in relations.

    Unconfirmed reports in the Turkish and Israeli press this week have shed some light on the recent diplomatic meetings, but official statements have been lacking.

    Turkish media have speculated that Israel might pay 100,000 dollars in damages to each of the families of the men who were killed on the Mavi Marmara. However, in his remarks on Friday, Unal said, ‘We have not voiced any compensation amount.’

    The question of an apology is also undecided and sensitive, as it appears that Israel would prefer a word less strong than ‘apology,’ such as ‘regret.’

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry’s spokesperson declined to comment on the nature of any ongoing or upcoming talks between the two countries.

    via Turkey still wants apology and compensation from Israel – Monsters and Critics.

  • Turkey’s rise puts Israel on edge

    Turkey’s rise puts Israel on edge

    By Marwan Al Kabalan

    israel gul

    For almost two years now, since the Israeli assault on Gaza in December 2008, Turkey’s new regional orientations have been subject to intense debate in Israel’s academic and media circles.

    Yet, if the diplomatic crisis between the once close allies has shown anything it is the failure of Israeli academics and policymakers to understand the new dynamics of Turkish politics.

    Media coverage in Israel indicates that the Netanyahu government deals with Turkey as if it is still ruled by coalition governments and influenced by media barons and top generals.

    In the 1990s, Israel established strong ties with these power centers, while ignoring public opinion and the civilian administration. Over the past decade, since the Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power in 2002, Turkey has undergone fundamental change, but Israeli mentality remained unchanged.

    In Israel, the AKP government, which received half of the electoral votes in the latest parliamentary elections, is often described as Islamo-fascist. Calls for the Turkish military to intervene and “protect the secular traditions of the country from Islamic influences” are frequently made by Israeli intellectuals. Moreover, Israeli policy-makers are still viewing their relations with Turkey from a military-security perspective. As a result, the belief that ties with Ankara can be maintained by winning over the Turkish military persists.

    This line of thought was clearly expressed in an interview by Israeli President Shimon Peres with Defense News a few months ago. In that interview Peres said: “Turkey is the only country in the world where a non-democratic institution, the army, was in charge of preserving democracy. And they did it. Now, the role of the army has changed, and the question is whether (Prime Minister Recep Tayyip) Erdogan will lead his Muslim population towards a democracy or that democratic forces will demand a more Islamic state”.

    In response a Turkish columnist commented: “Those who think that Israel’s counterpart in Ankara is the Chief of the General Staff are overtly mistaken.”

    “In Ankara,” he went on saying, “there has been a silent revolution questioning the political role of the military and trying to push it back to the barracks. Israelis should understand that their counterpart in Ankara is the elected civilian government.”

    Concerns

    In addition, in dealing with Turkish politics, Israelis tend to ignore the role of public opinion, which has become a key element in the formation of Turkey’s new foreign policy. Most Turks are convinced today that Israel has been exploiting the secular-religious divide in Turkey to serve its interests.

    Israelis seem to have failed to notice that anti-Israeli sentiments are no longer limited to Islamist circles but have also penetrated the more secular groups. Most Turkish analysts believe that without taking into account what the Turkish public thinks, it is impossible to repair Turkish-Israeli relations. Israeli columnists have expressed concerns about these latest developments.

    Zvi Bar’el wrote in Haaretz, a major Israeli daily: “The serious damage was caused by the swift shift in Turkish public opinion, which once formed the basis of Turkey’s warm relations with Israel. The Turkish public could not tolerate insulting its envoys (a reference to the bad treatment of the Turkish ambassador in Tel Aviv by Israeli officials) or the killing of Turkish civilians (a reference to the killing of ten Turks by Israeli Special Forces aboard the Free Gaza Flotilla last May). It is the public that takes to the streets when it is not satisfied with its government. They are vocal when their government’s policies are not to their liking.”

    Israel may or may not realize that a new regional order is in the making in the Middle East, in which Turkey plays an important role. What is certain, however, is that the rise of new Turkey is seen by Israel as a threat to its national security. It is difficult to see Turkish-Israeli relations improving any time soon.

    Dr. Marwan Kabalan is Director at the Damascus Centre for Economic and Political Studies.

    (Source: Gulf News)

    Photo: Turkey’s president Abdullah Gul (front) arrives at the Parliament hall for his speech as Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (2R) and ministers applaud during the opening of Turkish parliamentary year in Ankara, on October 1, 2010. (Getty Images)

    via tehran times : Turkey’s rise puts Israel on edge.