Daily Sabah (Turkey)

FM Çavuşoğlu discusses Herzog’s visit to Turkey with Lapid

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FOREIGN Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu discussed the upcoming visit of Israeli President Isaac Herzog to Turkey in a phone call with Yair Lapid on Sunday.

According to the Foreign Ministry, Çavuşoğlu also thanked Lapid for extending his get well soon wishes to him over COVID-19.

The foreign minister had tested positive for COVID-19 and said he would continue to work from home.

The phone call between the two top diplomats came after a high-level Turkish delegation led by Presidenti­al Spokespers­on İbrahim Kalın visited Israel on Thursday and met with Israeli officials ahead of Herzog’s visit. During the meeting, both parties have agreed that “the rehabilita­tion of relations can contribute to regional stability.”

“The parties discussed preparatio­ns for the visit of Israeli President Isaac Herzog to Turkey, bilateral ties between the two countries, as well as various regional issues,” Herzog’s office and the Israeli Foreign Ministry said in a joint statement.

“Turkey and Israel have broad influence in the region, and both have agreed that the rehabilita­tion of relations can contribute to regional stability,” the statement added.

Turkey is on a path toward normalizin­g ties with Israel and Ankara had stated it may mediate between Israel and Palestine. In steps toward a thaw in relations with Israel, Turkish officials have stressed that Turkey’s support for the Palestinia­n cause and a two-state solution remains as strong as ever. Turkey has frequently underlined that normalizat­ion with Israel will not be at the cost of Palestine.

Herzog’s trip is said to take place on March 9 and 10. Erdoğan has hailed the visit as an opportunit­y to “open a new chapter in relations between Turkey and Israel.”

Erdoğan earlier this month expressed Turkey’s interest in resuming talks with Israel on using its natural gas and transporti­ng it to Europe. Turkey and Israel had previously attempted to cooperate on energy resources, but those talks had never moved very far.

Relations between Turkey and Israel hit a low in 2010 following an Israeli naval raid on a Turkish aid ship, the Mavi Marmara, en route to deliver humanitari­an aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip. The raid killed 10 activists. The event caused an unpreceden­ted crisis in Turkish-Israeli relations that had been peaceful for decades. Both countries even recalled their diplomatic envoys following the incident.

In 2013, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s apology to Turkey and the payment of $20 million (TL 272 million) in compensati­on to the Mavi Marmara victims, Turkish-Israeli relations entered a period of normalizat­ion. In December 2016, both countries reappointe­d ambassador­s as part of the reconcilia­tion deal and reiterated several times the necessity to further improve bilateral relations. The two countries once again expelled each other’s ambassador­s in 2018 after another bitter falling out, and relations have since remained tense.

In recent months, however, the two countries have been working on a rapprochem­ent with Erdoğan, a vocal supporter of the Palestinia­n cause, holding telephone talks with his Israeli counterpar­t and other Israeli leaders. In November, Erdoğan also spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, in a rare exchange between the two countries, the first such contact between an Israeli prime minister and Erdoğan since 2013.

Despite the recent rapprochem­ent, Turkish officials continue to criticize Israel’s policies targeting Palestinia­ns, including the illegal settlement­s in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, and the humanitari­an situation in Gaza.

Known for its unbreakabl­e solidarity with the Palestinia­ns, Turkey has been voicing support for the Palestinia­n cause in the internatio­nal realm for decades. Turkish authoritie­s emphasize that the only way to achieve lasting peace and stability in the Middle East is through a fair and comprehens­ive solution to the Palestinia­n issue within the framework of internatio­nal law and United Nations resolution­s.

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