Tag: Mavi Marmara

  • It is time for Israel and Turkey to remember their deep common history

    It is time for Israel and Turkey to remember their deep common history

    It is time for Israel and Turkey to remember their deep common history

    BY SINEM TEZYAPAR

    584-Mavi_1

    I am a Turkish Muslim and every time I have a conversation with an Israeli friend, they keep asking me why the relations between Israel and Turkey have reached such a nadir, why Turkey seemingly has an antagonistic stance against Israel.

    First of all, Turkey’s being totally against Israel is out of question. Turkey and Israel are two countries who have deep-rooted, solid relations, and there will be no change in that. Although the language in the political arena may give a different impression, the bond between the Turkish and Israeli public remains unshaken. Yes, there has been a tension between Turkey and Israel for the last couple of years; however this is a temporary thing. And the Turkish public has never ceased to care for Israelis.

    The Mavi Marmara episode was an unwanted incident and I do not believe that no one ever presumed that things would end the way they did. I am confident that if both sides had known the result ahead of time, they would have striven to handle things in an entirely different manner. The Israeli public has to decide how they want to compensate, but we consider Israel as a friendly country in any event and we want to overcome this regrettable incident in the soonest time.

    Turkey and Israel share common features that deepens their alliance. Both states are officially secular while their people are predominantly religious. Since secularism is both a precaution and a blessing against hypocrisy, in both countries people who chose to be religious follow their free will and no one can compel anyone to any religion. That is to say, there is a firm stance against bigotry and in both countries people are respected and embraced regardless of their religion. And in both, just like believers can live by their faith, non-believers live as they choose as well.

    Israel and Turkey being secular prevents coercion, compulsion in the name of religion, and does not give ground for hypocrisy. Their interpretation of secularism should not be confused with atheism; rather, it guarantees the freedom of the public to practice their religion as they see fit. In both Israel and Turkey, democratic awareness and democratic values are more firmly rooted than any other country in the region. There is no room or tolerance for dictatorship or despotic regimes.

    Another commonality between the people of Turkey and Israel is that they do not have an overweening ambition to live a materialistic life in luxury. Both have known hardship and they have both been nurtured from their spirituality and conviction. They have been living under fire in a region that has never known stability and that has always been in the focus of the world with their conflicts.

    As the Turkish nation, we want nothing more then the continuance of Israel’s existence in peace and tranquility. We are happy to see its being prosperous and all its citizens living in comfort and safety. As Turkish people, the settling of the Jews in the region, their residing in those lands and their being free is something that we are not uncomfortable about. On the contrary; when various public figures in the Middle East make threatening and, quite frankly, genocidal pronouncements against the Israeli state and its citizens, it disturbs us greatly and we would never let something like that happen.

    Just like we came to the aid of our Jewish brothers and sisters and sailed them in private ships to Turkey in 1492 during the period of the Spanish Inquisition and welcomed them in our country, we will be ready to run to their help whenever they are in need. When Hitler targeted the Jews during the Nazis genocidal “Final Solution”, we struggled with all our might to protect them. We have lived in a friendly and brotherly manner together with our Jewish brothers. We have always provided good means for them, we have always wanted them to live in ease and comfort and that will always be the case as well. This is because such an attitude is the requisite of the morality that Islam requires. The Muslim Turks’ attitude for centuries has demonstrated that Turks and Jews have continued to help each other in times of great crises and it will continue to be this way, no matter what happens.

    When we go a back a little further in history, this is even more evident that Jews and Muslims not only coexisted but also supported each other. After the Romans destroyed the Second Temple and took control of the city, they expelled Jews from the city forbidding them to live there. When Rome adopted Christianity, they maintained a strict ban on Jews coming near Jerusalem after 325 A.D. Jews were only allowed to enter once a year to pray on Tisha B’Av. The ban on Jews entering the city remained in force until the Muslim Caliph Umar took control of the city. Muslims then welcomed the Jews to come back to Jerusalem for the first time in about 600 years. During the Abbasid Caliphate, Muslims continued to welcome Jews to settle in the city and this situation continued until the city was invaded by the Crusaders in 1099. Another point to be emphasized is that Muslims and Jews fought side-by-side to defend the city against the invading Crusaders. After the Crusaders conquered Jerusalem, and put a good many of the inhabitants to the sword -both Jewish and Muslim alike- Jews were once again prohibited to enter Jerusalem. This prohibition continued till the Muslim leader Salah al-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub, known better as Saladin, finally liberated the city in 1187 from the Crusaders and invited the Jews to return to Jerusalem with no restrictions and allowed them to take up residence.

    The existence of Turkey is a safeguard for Israel. We will be the first ones to stand up for any kind of threat that might be aimed at Israel. There will never be a formation in Turkey that would aim to harm the Jewish people. Just as it could be in any society, there may be one or two rare extreme radical people and those individuals might come up with some unreasonable or irrational opinions. But radical thought can never find a broad foundation in Turkey.
What matters is that we are not a state in search of hostility. From time to time, we might have problems, as is inevitable between sovereign nation-states, but there will never be a complete termination of our friendship.

    We both want peace, friendship, democracy, human rights, goodness, compassion and love to be dominant in the region and we want to live a beautiful life together. Turkey and Israel working in unison can make the entire region faithful, prosperous and put an end to terror, radicalism and anarchy. Israel and Turkey will continue with their alliance as strong as steel and bring peace, love and tranquility to the region.

  • Israeli Initiative with Turkey Fails

    Israeli Initiative with Turkey Fails

    The head of Israel’s National Security Council met a Turkish official in an attempt to restore ties, but to no avail.

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    Mavi Marmara

    A recent Israeli attempt to restore the strained relations with Turkey failed, according to a report on Channel 2 News on Saturday night.

    According to the report, the head of Israel’s National Security Council, Yaakov Amidror, recently met in Rome with the Director-General of the Foreign Ministry in Ankara.

    The meeting was held at the initiative of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s Office and was also attended by Joseph Ciechanover, formerly the Director-General of the Israeli Foreign Ministry. However, the meeting failed and no agreements were reached.

    Israel’s relationship with Turkey broke down completely after the 2010 incident on the Mavi Marmara ship.

    The vessel, owned by the Turkish IHH group, was one of six sent to illegally breach Israel’s maritime blockade of Gaza as a “humanitarian flotilla” but was found to be carrying nothing.

    When the vessels ignored repeated Israeli navy requests to redirect their boats to Ashdod port, IDF commandos boarded each vessel to force them to port, where the humanitarian aid they were allegedly carrying could be off-loaded and carried to Gaza through the land crossings with Israel.

    In the case of the Mavi Marmara, however, the Israeli soldiers – armed only with pistols and paint-ball training guns — were brutally attacked by the “activists” as they boarded, with several critically injured. The commandos who followed them shot and killed their attackers, leaving nine dead.

    Turkish leaders have demanded an apology from Israel over the incident, but Israeli leaders have refused, saying Israel had acted in self-defense.

    Former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman emphasized in the past that Israel is ready to solve any outstanding disputes with Turkey, but it will not apologize to Ankara for the raid on the Mavi Marmara.

    Turkey has several times rejected offers by Israel to improve relations. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erodgan has chosen to deepen the conflict by continuously verbally attacking Israel.

    Earlier this month, Erdogan accused Israel of waging “state terrorism”, condemning an alleged Israeli air strike in Syria as an unacceptable violation of international law.

    Tags: Mavi Marmara ,Yaakov Amidror ,Israel-Turkey relations

    via Israeli Initiative with Turkey Fails – Middle East – News – Israel National News.

  • ‘Turkey Marmara trial a cynical political process

    ‘Turkey Marmara trial a cynical political process

    ‘ By YONAH JEREMY BOB02/20/2013 03:09

    Trial of 4 former IDF commanders charged with the deaths of nine Turks aboard the Mavi Marmara set to restart.

    Turkish cruise ship Mavi Marmara, carrying pro-Palestinian activists and humanitarian aid to Gaza, leaves from Sarayburnu port in Istanbul

    Mavi Marmara Photo: Stringer Turkey / Reuters

    Two days away from the restart of Turkey’s trial on Thursday in absentia of top Israeli military commanders regarding the May 2010 Marvi Marmara flotilla incident, The Jerusalem Post recently spoke to a top government legal official who said that the entire process is “political, not really judicial. It looks judicial, but it’s really not.”

    The first set of hearings for the trial of four former Israeli military commanders, charged with the deaths of nine Turks aboard the Mavi Marmara, started in November 2012, but recessed after a few days.

    Related:

    ‘Common sense must reign in Mavi Marmara case’

    ‘Families of Marmara flotilla victims sue Israel’

    The commanders charged are former chief of staff Lt.-Gen. (res.) Gabi Ashkenazi, former OC Navy V.-Adm. (res.) Eliezer Marom, former OC Military Intelligence Maj.-Gen. (res.) Amos Yadlin and former Air Force Intelligence chief Brig.-Gen. (res.) Avishai Levy.

    The 144-page indictment in the case seeks more than 18,000 years of life sentences in a trial expecting around 490 witnesses.

    Speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue, the official asked, “What does Turkey want with this? Maybe they’re waiting to [see] what the next government looks like.”

    The government to date has boycotted the proceedings, referring to the trial as a “kangaroo court.” But Israel has faced biased audiences before and has found ways to indirectly present its point of view, such as when former Israeli government officials presented what would have been many of Israel’s arguments to the UN’s Goldstone Commission that investigated the 2008-2009 Gaza War, even though the government itself boycotted the hearings.

    Asked if any similar behind the scenes efforts were under way, the official demurred, saying “this is nothing like Goldstone. The case is not against a state, it’s against four individuals,” implying that it was not even clear what kind of standing Israel as a country would have had to appear before the Turkish court.

    The official said that the decision not to attempt even behind the scenes presenting of Israel’s position was made in light of an estimation that “I don’t think the Turkish judge will go against the Turkish government’s” agenda of harming Israel’s image – “there is no chance,” he said.

    He also said, “I don’t think any legal arguments could impact the process, because it is not a judicial process at all. The trial is being used for cynical political processes.”

    What objective factors brought the official to these conclusions? The official said the court was completely ignoring the neutral and authoritative UN-sponsored Palmer Report on the incident, which held that Israel’s blockade was legal under international law and that to the extent that there were Israeli violations of the law of armed conflict in the altercations on the vessel, their severity was mitigated by the context of the Israel Navy sailors being under attack.

    The “judge can look at the Palmer Report which is not like the actions discussed in the trial,” the official said.

    He said unlike the Turkish trial, the Palmer Report makes no mention of “murder” allegations, at most describing certain actions as “mistakes” and problematic “planning issues in the context of self-defense.”

    The official said that Israel was not afraid of defending itself in cases in countries where it believed it had a shot at a fair trial and that to date “no universal jurisdiction case has gotten past the first round of procedures” to go to trial.

    Ties between Jerusalem and what was once its only Muslim ally crumbled after the incident, in which some of the sailors who tried to commandeer the ship were wounded in clashes with those on board that left nine of the passengers dead.

    Turkish media reports and various Twitter accounts of the case in November indicated that the witnesses included statements from the families of the nine dead passengers and people from other ships in the protest flotilla as well as surviving activists from the Mavi Marmara.

    Ahmed Dogan – the father of 19- year-old Furkan Dogan, the youngest of the dead passengers – said he saw evidence showing that his son had been “shot in the face,” according to the reports.

    Mary Ann Wright, a 65-year-old former US Army colonel who was aboard the nearby Challenger 1 ship, testified about the scale of the military force involved in stopping the flotilla as well as the sailors’ conduct vis-a-vis the firing of paintballs and tossing of stun grenades.

    According to the reports, Wright said she believed that such a force could only have been meant to attack.

    The reports could not be confirmed and no Israeli officials are present at the trial to make objections or cross-examine the witnesses.

    via ‘Turkey Marmara trial a cynical p… JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

  • Israel to allow Turkey to build Gaza hospital

    Israel to allow Turkey to build Gaza hospital

    ‘Israel to allow Turkey to build Gaza hospital’

    By JPOST.COM STAFF

    02/11/2013 20:05

    Turkish daily reports J’lem permits entry of construction materials as part of easing of blockade agreed, gesture to Turks.

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    Mashaal and Erdogan meet in Ankara

    Mashaal and Erdogan meet in Ankara Photo: REUTERS

    Israel has authorized Turkey to transport construction materials into the Gaza Strip in order to build a Turkish-funded hospital in the coastal territory, Turkish daily Hurriyet reported on Monday.

    According to the report, the hospital will be inaugurated within a year’s time, and the ceremony will be attended by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    Related:

    Official: Turkish tirades reveal ‘brazen hypocrisy’

    ‘Turkey hurting NATO by undermining Israel ties’

    The Israeli government gave the authorization earlier this month after studying a list of materials the Turks were asking to import to Gaza. Hurriyet stated that Israel gave permission to transport the construction materials to Gaza as a gesture of goodwill toward Turkey.

    Turkey has long opposed Israel’s naval blockade of the Gaza Strip and relations between the countries deteriorated in the aftermath of the IDF’s raid of the Gaza-bound Mavi Marmara vessel in May 2010, in which nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists were killed.

    The hospital is slated to contain 150 beds, making it Gaza’s biggest hospital, Hurriyet reported.

    In addition to serving as a goodwill gesture to Ankara, the Israeli move was also described by Hurriyet as part of Israel’s softening of the Gaza blockade in the aftermath of Operation Pillar of Defense.

    Turkey has called for the lifting of the Gaza blockade, as well as an apology to Turkey for the Mavi Marmara raid and compensation for the families of those killed, as conditions to normalize relations between the countries.

    Hurriyet quoted diplomatic sources in Ankara as saying the January 22 Knesset election in Israel could provide a new opportunity to pacify relations between the countries.

    “Although I do not want to seem too optimistic over reconciliation between the two countries, I see a window of opportunity in light of the election results,” the sources told Hurriyet.

    via ‘Israel to allow Turkey to build … JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

  • Israel could apologize to Turkey, deputy FM says

    Jerusalem is prepared to mend ties with Ankara, Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said Thursday, going so far as to express willingness to write a letter of apology to the Turkish government.

    Danny Ayalon Photo: Screenshot

    “I see some kind of improvement and opportunities” regarding Israel’s relationship with Turkey, which deteriorated following the Mavi Marmara raid in 2010, Ayalon told the Turkish daily Hurriyet.

    There is a way to ease the ongoing tension between the countries and rebuild relations, the outgoing deputy minister said, pointing at an “American-Pakistani formula” that “could be a good platform to clear away the issue.”

    Ayalon was referring to an incident in which American forces accidentally killed 24 Pakistani soldiers, an event that strained the relationship between the countries.

    “The Americans sent a letter that was accepted in Pakistan,” Ayalon said, noting that the same idea could be used to mend Israel-Turkey ties.

    Ayalon answered “yes” when asked if such a letter was an apology. Based on the text of the letter sent by the US, “I think that should be clear to everyone,” he said.

    The deputy foreign minister has been seen as having played a substantive role in Jerusalem’s deteriorating ties with Ankara, after he apparently attempted to publicly shame Turkey’s ambassador to Israel by seating him on a low chair and failing to display a Turkish flag in the room during a 2010 meeting in which he rebuked the envoy for an anti-Israel television series screened in Turkey.

    While communication between Ankara and Jerusalem hasn’t been as open and comprehensive as before, the deputy foreign minister said, there were still “lower-level [talks]” and “back channels” being used by the countries.

    via Israel could apologize to Turkey, deputy FM says | The Times of Israel.

  • Turkey Denies Probing Jews Over Mavi Marmara

    Turkey Denies Probing Jews Over Mavi Marmara

    Turkey strongly denies reports it launched a probe into Jewish citizens for collaborating with Israel in the raid on the Mavi Marmara.

    img251592Turkey has strongly denied reports that it had launched a probe into some of the country’s Jewish citizens on the grounds that they had collaborated with Israel in the deadly 2010 raid on the Mavi Marmara flotilla which killed nine Turks, Today’s Zaman reports.

    “There has never been anti-Semitism in any part of our history and there will never be. Racism does not exist in the culture and the tradition of the Turkish nation. Turkey has repeatedly said it considers anti-Semitism and racism as crimes against humanity, ” Selçuk Ünal, Turkish Foreign Ministry Spokesperson, said, according to the report.

    Ünal said legal procedures are underway to identify possible perpetrators of the Mavi Marmara incident, adding that those legal procedures had nothing to do with Turkey’s “Jewish community who are equal citizens and an integral part of our society.”

    The Turkish media claimed last week that Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT) identified five Turkish citizens who were allegedly either among the Israeli troops who raided the Mavi Marmara or among those who interrogated the victims following the raid on the ship in May 2010.

    According to reports, the names and addresses of the five have been identified, at the request of the prosecutor’s office, thanks to the efforts of the MİT and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    The MİT conducted an investigation into all Turkish citizens leaving Turkey for Israel at least two weeks before and returning up to two weeks after the Mavi Marmara incident, and sent the information regarding these five Turkish citizens who are allegedly part of the elite Israeli naval commando Shayetet 13, to the Istanbul 7th High Criminal Court.

    The Marmara incident involved nine armed terror activists who attacked Israeli commandos in a clash aboard the Mavi Marmara flotilla ship. The vessel, owned by the Turkish IHH group, was one of six sent to illegally breach Israel’s maritime blockade of Gaza as a “humanitarian flotilla” but was found to be carrying nothing.

    When the vessels ignored repeated Israeli navy requests to redirect their boats to Ashdod port, IDF commandos boarded each vessel to force them to port, where the humanitarian aid they were allegedly carrying could be off-loaded and carried to Gaza through the land crossings with Israel.

    In the case of the Mavi Marmara, however, the Israeli soldiers – armed only with pistols and paint-ball training guns — were brutally attacked by the “activists” as they boarded, with several critically injured. The commandos who followed them shot and killed their attackers, leaving nine dead.

    The incident caused Israel’s relationship with Turkey, already strained, to break down completely. Turkish leaders demanded an apology, but Israeli leaders refused, saying Israel had acted in self-defense.

    Former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has emphasized them Israel is ready to solve any outstanding disputes with Turkey, but it will not apologize to Ankara for the raid on the Mavi Marmara.

    “We are ready to discuss [our problems with Turkey] in high-level or low-level open meetings,” said Lieberman. “We’re really ready to discuss not only this issue but also the Iranian problem, the Gaza issue or the support for Hamas. But [we’re not ready] to discuss in what way we will protect our citizens.”

    “[The Mavi Marmara mission] was a clear provocation and it was our right to protect the lives of our soldiers. Frankly speaking, Israel has no reason to apologize,” he added.

    Turkey plans to try four top IDF commanders for the Marmara raid.

    The accused officials are: Former IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi, former Navy Chief Eliezer Marom, former Military Intelligence head Amos Yadlin and former Air Force Intelligence Chief Avishai Levy.

    The trial was due to start in November, but it has been adjourned until February.

    via Turkey Denies Probing Jews Over Mavi Marmara – Middle East – News – Israel National News.