The Star Malaysia

Mission to seek regional peace

Hamas leader to visit Turkiye for talks with Erdogan on curbing Israel

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ANKARA: Ismail Haniyeh, leader of the Palestinia­n Islamist group Hamas, will travel to Turkiye at the weekend to hold talks with President Tayyip Erdogan, while Ankara’s top diplomat met the Hamas leader during a visit to Doha on Wednesday.

Turkiye, a Nato member, has denounced Israel’s offensive in Gaza and called for an immediate ceasefire. Erdogan has called Hamas a “liberation movement” while slamming the West for what he calls their unconditio­nal support of Israel.

Ankara has imposed trade restrictio­ns on Israel.

“I will host the leader of the Palestinia­n cause at the weekend. We will discuss a number of issues,” Erdogan told lawmakers from his AK Party in parliament.

Haniyeh’s visit to Istanbul will be his first trip to Turkiye since Israel began its campaign in Gaza on Oct 7. It also comes amid escalating regional tensions, after Iran attacked Israel at the weekend in response to an Israeli strike on the Iranian embassy compound in Damascus on April 1.

Erdogan said on Tuesday that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders were solely responsibl­e for the regional crisis.

In Doha, Turkyish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan met Haniyeh to discuss humanitari­an aid to Gaza, ceasefire efforts and talks on hostages. Hamas said in a statement it had conveyed its views on the ceasefire negotiatio­ns and its requiremen­ts, while reviewing “the importance and centrality of the Turkyish role”.

Speaking later at a press conference alongside Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n Al Thani, Fidan said the risk of a wider regional conflict persisted amid the Iranisrael

tensions, adding that countries which supported Israel should revise their positions.

He added that unity among Palestinia­ns was needed to achieve a sovereign Palestinia­n state and two-state solution, and that he had conveyed Turkiye’s position regarding a ceasefire in Gaza during his nearly three-hour meeting with Haniyeh.

“We see that many actors in the West who are sympatheti­c to this, who want to support this idea (two-state solution) have concerns about Hamas,” Fidan said, adding that Israeli “propaganda” portraying Hamas as a terrorist group had exacerbate­d concerns about the group in the West.

“We exchanged views on their (Hamas’) need to openly share what sort of views, what sort of expectatio­ns they have within the solution leading to a Palestinia­n state to alleviate these perception­s.”

Fidan said Hamas had previously vowed to shut down its armed wing if a Palestinia­n state in line with 1967 borders were establishe­d, adding the group would then continue only as a political party. He said this was repeated to him during his talks on Wednesday.

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