FM Cavusoglu: Turkey Refused Zionist Requests to Act Against Hamas
ANKARA (Dispatches) – Turkey refused to comply with the Zionist regime’s demands requesting the deportation of leaders of the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas living in the country during bilateral talks, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Tuesday at a parliamentary proceeding.
Responding to a question from MPs, Cavusoglu said Ankara does not view Hamas, the Palestinian resistance movement that rules the Gaza Strip, as a terror group and refused to expel them.
“We didn’t satisfy any [Zionist] request on Hamas, because we don’t perceive Hamas as a terror group,” Cavusoglu said. “We are always leading efforts to unify them with Fatah,” he added, referring to Hamas’ political rival, which dominates the Palestinian Authority (PA).
In late October, Zionist war minister Benny Gantz urged Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to expel Hamas leaders residing in the country during a visit to Ankara, according to Israeli news website Ynet.
The visit came two months after Turkey and the occupying regime restored full diplomatic relations following years of tensions.
Since 2020, Zionist officials have demanded concrete Turkish steps to address the presence of Hamas leaders in Turkey before launching into reconciliation talks. Turkey refused, however, while maintaining relations with the group and continuing to host some of its leaders in Istanbul.
Some Zionist regime officials have told Middle East Eye in the past that a reconciliation would not be possible without Hamas leaders being relocated to another country.
In September Erdogan met with the regime’s outgoing prime minister, Yair Lapid, in New York, his first meeting with a Zionist MP since 2008, when Ehud Olmert visited Ankara. The Turkish leader also said last month that he planned to visit the occupied territories after the 1 November elections and that Ankara will maintain good relations based on mutual interests whatever the election outcome.
However, Benjamin Netanyahu’s election victory with a coalition of far-right and ultra-Orthodox parties now risks a rupture between the two sides.
One of the main factors in rocky relations in the past decade has been the Zionist regime’s attacks on Palestinians in Al-Quds’s Al-Aqsa Mosque and the holy site’s status, which could be undermined under the new Zionist parliament. The presence of Hamas leaders remains another point of contention.
Turkish officials have yet to comment on the Zionist regime’s election results or congratulate Netanyahu.