Saturday 21 May 2011
Turkey Warns Israel over Repeating Gaza Flotilla Tragedy
Turkey Saturday warned Israel against another act of bloodshed in international waters after activists announced plans to send a new aid flotilla to the blockaded Gaza Strip.
"It should be known that Turkey will give the necessary response to any repeated act of provocation by Israel on the high seas," Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in an interview on NTV television.
"Those who believe Turkey should take certain steps to stop (the new flotilla) must first warn Israel not to repeat the human tragedy it caused last year," he said.
On May 31 last year, Israeli marines swarmed aboard the Turkish flagship of an international aid flotilla bound for Gaza, martyring nine Turks in international waters and plunging ties with Ankara into deep crisis.
The Istanbul-based charity which had spearheaded the mission said Friday that a new convoy of ships would sail to Gaza in the last week of June. Around 1,500 activists from more than 100 countries will take part in the convoy, organized by 22 civic groups, it said.
Asked whether Ankara had made any attempt to dissuade the group from the campaign, Davutoglu said: "We have never encouraged any convoy. We have shared our views about the safety of our citizens with all related parties. That was the case last year and it is not any different this time."
The minister insisted however that his government "cannot give instructions to civil society" and that Israel's "unlawful" blockade of Gaza lay at the core of the tensions. He urged the United States and the international community to back a recent reconciliation deal between the Palestinian resistance group Hamas and the secular Fatah faction of Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas.
"If the division of the Palestinian authorities is healed, the conditions that serve as Israel's justification for the blockade will be eradicated... and there will be no need for an aid convoy," he told NTV.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
"It should be known that Turkey will give the necessary response to any repeated act of provocation by Israel on the high seas," Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in an interview on NTV television.
"Those who believe Turkey should take certain steps to stop (the new flotilla) must first warn Israel not to repeat the human tragedy it caused last year," he said.
On May 31 last year, Israeli marines swarmed aboard the Turkish flagship of an international aid flotilla bound for Gaza, martyring nine Turks in international waters and plunging ties with Ankara into deep crisis.
The Istanbul-based charity which had spearheaded the mission said Friday that a new convoy of ships would sail to Gaza in the last week of June. Around 1,500 activists from more than 100 countries will take part in the convoy, organized by 22 civic groups, it said.
Asked whether Ankara had made any attempt to dissuade the group from the campaign, Davutoglu said: "We have never encouraged any convoy. We have shared our views about the safety of our citizens with all related parties. That was the case last year and it is not any different this time."
The minister insisted however that his government "cannot give instructions to civil society" and that Israel's "unlawful" blockade of Gaza lay at the core of the tensions. He urged the United States and the international community to back a recent reconciliation deal between the Palestinian resistance group Hamas and the secular Fatah faction of Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas.
"If the division of the Palestinian authorities is healed, the conditions that serve as Israel's justification for the blockade will be eradicated... and there will be no need for an aid convoy," he told NTV.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
Labels:
Flotilla Massacre,
Turkey
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1 comment:
If Hamas and other groups stopped smuggling arms into Gaza that are used to attack Israel there would be no need for a blockade. The US almost went to war with the USSR over missles in Cuba although neither country was engaged in armed hostilities against the other. There was no question of the legality of the blockade. If Hamas ceased its call for the destruction of Israel then peace would be more achievable. It seems, however, that the Palestinian leadership, which has often been corrupt, is more interested in perpetuating the conflict than in its resolution and the betterment of its people.
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