bc040400065
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2010
- Messages
- 1,092
- Reaction score
- 0
- Country
- Location
Turkey pushes for condemnation of Israel
Tuesday, 08 Jun, 2010
ISTANBUL: Turkey sought a fresh condemnation of Israel over its deadly raid on Gaza-bound aid ships as regional leaders gathered in Istanbul Tuesday to discuss security in Asia.
Presidents Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, Bashar al-Assad of Syria, Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan as well as Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas attended the gathering, expected to end with a joint declaration later Tuesday.
Speaking on the sidelines of the summit, Putin said Russia would raise at the United Nations the controversial issue of who should probe into last week's raid by Israeli forces on a flotilla carrying aid to the besieged Gaza Strip, which claimed nine lives.
We are deeply worried by such a crude violation of the universally recognized norms of international law, he told reporters, stressing the raid took place in international waters in the Mediterranean.
We can't allow a new flame to flare up in the Middle East... We will raise the issue at the United Nations, we're working at it, he said.
Despite strong regional backing, Turkey failed to secure a joint statement slamming Israel as the Jewish state was part of the summit of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA), a Turkish diplomat said.
Israeli leaders shunned the event, but Israeli ambassador to Turkey Gabby Levy represented the Jewish state and was part of the talks on a joint declaration, whose adoption required consensus, the diplomat said.
We cannot expect the Israeli representative to condemn his own country, he said. However, Turkish President Abdullah Gul, acting as summit chairman, was expected to make a statement denouncing Israel on behalf of the majority of member states, he added.
Nine Turks were killed in the May 31 raid, which sparked global outrage and plunged Israel's already strained ties with Nato member Turkey, once a close ally, into deep crisis.
The consequences of acts undertaken with feelings of hatred and vengeance are obvious. Unfortunately, we saw a merciless example of that recently, Gul said at Tuesday's summit.
We must definitely say 'stop' to this tendency which is extremely worrying with respect to international peace and security, he said.
Turkey said Monday that normalisation of ties with Israel would be out of the question if it failed to agree to an international probe into the bloodshed, a move the Jewish state has so far rejected.
Ankara has recalled its ambassador from Tel Aviv and scrapped joint military drills, saying economic and defence ties with Israel would be reduced to a minimum level.
Tuesday's summit was to focus on issues such as nuclear disarmement, peaceful use of nuclear energy and confidence-building measures in Asia, the Turkish foreign ministry said.
DAWN.COM | World | Turkey pushes for condemnation of Israel
Tuesday, 08 Jun, 2010
ISTANBUL: Turkey sought a fresh condemnation of Israel over its deadly raid on Gaza-bound aid ships as regional leaders gathered in Istanbul Tuesday to discuss security in Asia.
Presidents Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, Bashar al-Assad of Syria, Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan as well as Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas attended the gathering, expected to end with a joint declaration later Tuesday.
Speaking on the sidelines of the summit, Putin said Russia would raise at the United Nations the controversial issue of who should probe into last week's raid by Israeli forces on a flotilla carrying aid to the besieged Gaza Strip, which claimed nine lives.
We are deeply worried by such a crude violation of the universally recognized norms of international law, he told reporters, stressing the raid took place in international waters in the Mediterranean.
We can't allow a new flame to flare up in the Middle East... We will raise the issue at the United Nations, we're working at it, he said.
Despite strong regional backing, Turkey failed to secure a joint statement slamming Israel as the Jewish state was part of the summit of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA), a Turkish diplomat said.
Israeli leaders shunned the event, but Israeli ambassador to Turkey Gabby Levy represented the Jewish state and was part of the talks on a joint declaration, whose adoption required consensus, the diplomat said.
We cannot expect the Israeli representative to condemn his own country, he said. However, Turkish President Abdullah Gul, acting as summit chairman, was expected to make a statement denouncing Israel on behalf of the majority of member states, he added.
Nine Turks were killed in the May 31 raid, which sparked global outrage and plunged Israel's already strained ties with Nato member Turkey, once a close ally, into deep crisis.
The consequences of acts undertaken with feelings of hatred and vengeance are obvious. Unfortunately, we saw a merciless example of that recently, Gul said at Tuesday's summit.
We must definitely say 'stop' to this tendency which is extremely worrying with respect to international peace and security, he said.
Turkey said Monday that normalisation of ties with Israel would be out of the question if it failed to agree to an international probe into the bloodshed, a move the Jewish state has so far rejected.
Ankara has recalled its ambassador from Tel Aviv and scrapped joint military drills, saying economic and defence ties with Israel would be reduced to a minimum level.
Tuesday's summit was to focus on issues such as nuclear disarmement, peaceful use of nuclear energy and confidence-building measures in Asia, the Turkish foreign ministry said.
DAWN.COM | World | Turkey pushes for condemnation of Israel