Erdogan to visit Greece at a time of frosty ties with EU, US

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, right, and Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras at a bilateral meeting during the UN General Assembly in New York City in this file photo. (AP)
Updated 06 December 2017
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Erdogan to visit Greece at a time of frosty ties with EU, US

ATHENS: Greece is rolling out the red carpet for a visit this week by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, hoping to improve often-frosty ties between the two neighbors and NATO allies at a time when Turkey’s relations are being tested with both the EU and the US.
Security in Athens will be tight for Erdogan’s arrival on Thursday, when he will meet with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and the country’s largely ceremonial president, Prokopis Pavlopoulos, before heading to northeastern Greece the next day to speak with members of the country’s Muslim minority. Greek authorities on Wednesday announced a ban on demonstrations in central Athens during Erdogan’s stay.
“It’s a visit of exceptionally great significance and importance,” Greek government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopoulos said, adding the government was looking forward to “exceptionally constructive discussions.” It will be Erdogan’s first visit to Greece as Turkish president, although he has visited twice before as prime minister.
Talks are to focus on the refugee crisis, as Greek islands have been the gateway into Europe for migrants crossing from the Turkish coast, as well as regional relations, energy and business ties, and Turkey’s stalled bid to join the EU. Longstanding disputes with Greece such as territorial claims in the Aegean Sea will also be on the agenda, among other issues.
Erdogan’s visit comes as his country finds itself increasingly isolated on the international stage, and he could use his appearances in Athens to improve relations, some analysts say.
“It’s an attempt on the Turkish president’s behalf to de-escalate tensions with the EU, as the Turkish economy is very much dependent on European capital and as he foresees that relations with the US might take... a further negative prospect,” said Constantinos Filis, research director at the Institute of International Relations. “I think that Erdogan... has come to the conclusion that he cannot (maintain) both fronts at the same time with the West.”
Turkey’s ties with several European countries — Germany in particular — and the EU as a whole deteriorated significantly following Erdogan’s crackdown in response to a failed coup in Turkey in July 2016. Tens of thousands of Turks have been fired from their jobs, and tens of thousands more were imprisoned on accusations of being linked, however tenuously, with the man Erdogan blames for the attempted coup: Fethullah Gulen, a cleric who lives in the US and runs a network of schools, hospitals and businesses.
Since the failed coup, Greece is only the second EU country, after Poland, to have invited Erdogan to visit.
Tension has also risen recently between Ankara and Washington, particularly concerning the New York trial of a Turkish banker over alleged transactions with Iran. Erdogan lashed out Tuesday over the trial of Mehmet Hakan Atilla, describing it as an American conspiracy to blackmail and blemish his country.
“I think that he will take the opportunity and try to show a more moderate face, at least in Turkey’s relations with the EU,” Filis said. “If he decides to attack the EU and the US from a European capital — that is, Athens — then this will create a very serious problem for the Greek government, because the Greek government will have to respond.”
But many sources of tension remain between Greece and Turkey, neighbors with historically fragile relations who have come to the brink of war three times since the 1970s. Decades-old thorny issues include territorial disputes in the Aegean, the Muslim minority in northeastern Greece and the continued occupation by Turkish troops of northern Cyprus.
Some of these issues “will probably be hidden under the carpet,” said Filis. “I don’t think that Erdogan in the few hours that he will spend in Athens has the luxury, and neither Greece has the luxury, to discuss with Erdogan about the historic difficulties and differences in the Aegean, for instance.”
In Ankara, Erdogan’s spokesman Ibrahim Kalin told reporters on Wednesday that Turkey hoped the visit would “develop and deepen” ties between the two neighbors, noting that both countries “have shouldered great responsibilities in resolving the issue” of migration.
He accused the EU of failing to fulfill its obligations in a March 2016 EU-Turkey deal, saying it had yet to disburse funds earmarked for Syrian refugees in Turkey, allow Turkish citizens visa-free travel or open new negotiation “chapters” to advance Turkey’s EU membership bid.
Kalin said, however, that Ankara is pleased with Greece’s support for Turkey’s membership bid.
Tzanakopoulos, the Greek government spokesman, said Athens expects the visit to produce “a substantial upgrading of our relations with Turkey, as this will, in a period of widespread destabilization in the region, play a catalytic role both for economic development and for the improvement of special relations, both of Greece with Turkey, as well as between Turkey and the European Union.”


Video shows armed men beating a Palestinian in West Bank

Updated 9 sec ago
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Video shows armed men beating a Palestinian in West Bank

  • The previous incident was in September and cost the business more than $600,000 as offices and facilities were damaged, he said

TEL AVIV: Dozens of masked men armed with sticks beat and injured a Palestinian in the Israeli-occupied West Bank when they attacked a plant nursery, according to people who saw the attack and video footage obtained by The Associated Press.
Video filmed by security cameras shows men dressed mostly in black, faces covered, with several hitting and kicking a man on the ground.
Two witnesses who are members of the family that owns the facility said Israeli settlers beat 67-year-old Basim Saleh Yassin as he was trying to flee the German-Palestinian-run nursery in the northern West Bank village of Deir Sharaf. Both spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

BACKGROUND

The attack is the latest in rising Israeli settler violence in the West Bank, where assaults increased during the Palestinian olive harvest in October and have continued.

Workers fled when they saw the settlers coming on Thursday but Yassin is deaf and couldn’t hear the warnings to leave, one family member said.
The witnesses said Yassin was in the hospital with broken bones in his hand and other injuries to his face, chest and back. Four cars at the nursery were burned.
The attack is the latest in rising Israeli settler violence in the West Bank, where assaults increased during the Palestinian olive harvest in October and have continued. 
Israeli authorities have done little beyond issuing occasional condemnations of the violence.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called the perpetrators “a handful of extremists” and urged law enforcement to pursue them for “the attempt to take the law into their own hands.” 
But rights groups and Palestinians say the problem is far greater than a few bad actors, and attacks have become a daily phenomenon across the territory.
Israel’s army said it dispatched soldiers to the Shavei Shomron junction — close to the area of Thursday’s attack — following reports of dozens of masked Israelis vandalizing property. 
The army said it apprehended three suspects who were taken to police for questioning. It said security forces condemn violence of any kind.
According to one of the family members who own the nursery, it was the third time in a year that the facility was attacked. 
The previous incident was in September and cost the business more than $600,000 as offices and facilities were damaged, he said.
In the video of Thursday’s attack, Yassin runs from a group of masked people before falling to the ground.
One man kicks him and another hits him twice with what appears to be a stick. Yassin stays on his knees as he’s struck again and then places his hands on the ground. 
As the men are leaving, one kicks him in the head while others strike him again until he’s seen lying on the pavement.