Ottawa Citizen

Israel apologizes for deadly flotilla raid

Diplomatic relations with Turkey restored amid fears Syria civil war could spill over

- IAN DEITCH

Israel agreed to restore full diplomatic relations with Turkey in a surprising turnaround Friday after apologizin­g for a botched naval raid that resulted in the deaths of nine Turkish activists aboard an internatio­nal flotilla bound for Gaza in 2010.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced the breakthrou­gh after a phone conversati­on with his Turkish counterpar­t, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The 20-minute phone call was brokered by visiting U.S. President Barack Obama shortly before he left Israel.

The announceme­nt was an unexpected reversal by Netanyahu, who has repeatedly rejected calls to apologize. But the two countries’ joint interests, including fears that the Syrian civil war could spill over their respective borders, made the time ripe to mend relations.

“The two men agreed to restore normalizat­ion between Israel and Turkey, including the dispatch of ambassador­s and the cancellati­on of legal steps against Israeli soldiers,” a statement from Netanyahu’s office said.

Netanyahu “expressed regret over the deteriorat­ion in bilateral relations and noted his commitment to working out the disagreeme­nts in order to advance peace and regional stability,” it said.

The statement stressed that the bloodshed was not intentiona­l. “In light of the Israeli investigat­ion into the incident, which pointed out several operationa­l errors, Prime Minister Netanyahu apologized to the Turkish people for any errors that could have led to loss of life and agreed to complete the agreement on compensati­on,” the statement said.

Israel intercepte­d a ship named Mavi Marmara while stopping an internatio­nal flotilla trying to breach an Israeli blockade of the Hamasruled Gaza Strip. Israel considers Hamas, which has killed hundreds of Israelis in suicide bombings and other attacks on buses and cafés, a terrorist group. Israel says it imposed the blockade to prevent Gaza militants from getting weapons. Gaza militants have fired thousands of rockets and mortar rounds at Israeli border communitie­s and towns during the past decade.

Israel has previously blamed the activists for the bloodshed of the morning of May 31, 2010, saying its naval commandos were attacked when they boarded the ship. Israel released videos showing armed activists brandishin­g iron rods and clubs attacking the soldiers as they slowly rappelled onto the deck from a helicopter. Soldiers were overpowere­d as they landed. They were surrounded by men with sticks. One soldier was tossed onto a lower deck.

The military later said the soldiers were not expecting trouble and had paintball guns as their primary weapons while handguns were only for an emergency. Two activists grabbed the handguns away from soldiers and shot two of them, the military said at the time. Both activists were then shot and killed.

The fighting left nine activists dead, most of them Turks, and dozens were wounded. On the Israeli side, a total of seven soldiers were wounded.

Israel insisted that its soldiers acted in self-defence and later showcased knives, slingshots and clubs they said were found on-board the ship. Some activists had militaryst­yle gear, including bulletproo­f vests and night-vision goggles. Israel said this indicated that the activists had planned for violence.

The activists also said they acted in self-defence and insist they were attacked first.

Israeli officials said Obama helped play a role in the reconcilia­tion, but that efforts had been going on behind the scenes for some time.

Israel and Turkey were once close allies. But in recent years, ties have deteriorat­ed with the rise of Erdogan’s Islamist party. Following the flotilla incident, Turkey withdrew its ambassador to Israel and greatly scaled back military and economic ties. But relations were never broken completely.

A statement from Erdogan’s office said Netanyahu had apologized on behalf of Israel for all kinds of mistakes that resulted in the loss of life or injuries in light of an investigat­ion led by the Israeli side that pointed at a series of operationa­l mistakes. “Our prime minister accepted the apology in the name of the Turkish people,” it said.

The statement from Turkey said an agreement also had been reached on the issue of compensati­on and that Israel had lifted restrictio­ns on the movement of goods to Gaza as long as “calm” lasts.

During the telephone conversati­on, Erdogan told Netanyahu that he valued the strong ties of friendship between the Turkish and Jewish people, the statement said.

Erdogan “expressed that it was saddening that relations, which are of vital strategic importance for peace and the stability of the region, have been soured in recent years,” the statement said.

The statement said Erdogan “renewed his support for internatio­nal and regional efforts to find a lasting and comprising solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict based on the two-state vision.”

The U.S. welcomed the developmen­t as a means to advance regional peace and security.

“I am hopeful that today’s exchange between the two leaders will enable them to engage in deeper co-operation on this and a range of other challenges and opportunit­ies,” Obama said in a statement.

 ?? FREE GAZA MOVEMENT/FINANCIAL POST/FILES ?? People send off the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara in this 2010 file photo. Israel and Turkey normalized relations on Friday three years after the deadly raid that led to tensions.
FREE GAZA MOVEMENT/FINANCIAL POST/FILES People send off the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara in this 2010 file photo. Israel and Turkey normalized relations on Friday three years after the deadly raid that led to tensions.

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