Hamas denounces Kerry’s call on Erdogan to delay Gaza visit
GAZA CITY: The Hamas rulers of Gaza on Sunday slammed US
Secretary of State John Kerry for urging the Turkish prime minister to
delay a visit to the Palestinian territory.
Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri accused Kerry and Palestinian
president Mahmud Abbas -- who met in Istanbul earlier in the day -- of
“collusion in a bid to maintain the (Israeli) blockade on Gaza.” “Hamas
denounces the US position calling for the cancellation of Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to Gaza. This proves US involvement in
consecrating the Gaza blockade,” Abu Zuhri said in a statement.
Kerry met separately in Istanbul with Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and Abbas, and told reporters he had asked Erdogan to
wait for the “right conditions” before going ahead with a planned visit
next month to Gaza.
“We have expressed to the prime minister that it would be better to
delay (the visit to Gaza),” Kerry told reporters.
Erdogan announced last week that he was planning to visit Gaza at the
end ofof next month after a key trip to Washington on May 16 to push for
the lifting of the blockade.
Abbas’s West Bank-based nationalist Fatah movement, a long-time rival
to Hamas, has said Erdogan’s plans to visit Gaza would foster
intra-Palestinian divisions.
And Washington fears Erdogan’s visit could hurt a US-brokered
rapprochement between former allies Turkey and Israel after a three-year
rift.
Kerry’s talks with Erdogan focused mainly on restoring ties between
Turkey and Israel, which collapsed after a deadly Israeli raid on a
Gaza-bound aid ship in 2010 that killed nine Turkish activists.
After long refusing Ankara’s demand for a formal apology, Israel last
month finally made the gesture at the urging of US President Barack
Obama.
But for the full restoration of ties and reappointment of its
ambassador to Israel, Ankara insists the Jewish state pay compensation
for the raid victims and lift its punishing restrictions on Gaza.Israeli
and Turkish officials meet on Monday for talks on compensation.
AFP |