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>> The Financial Times


ERDOGAN STORMS OUT OF DAVOS DEBATE

The Financial Times - January 30, 2009 by Richard Edgar and Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson in Davos The World Economic Forum in Davos was rocked by a diplomatic fracas on Thursday night as Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, stormed off the stage after an emotional debate with Shimon Peres, Israel’s president, in a session about Gaza and the case for Middle East peace. Klaus Schwab, organiser of the Davos gathering, scrambled to reassert “the Davos spirit” after Mr Erdogan said he would never come back to the Swiss resort. The incident was one of the biggest upsets to an event dedicated to what he called “natural understanding” between nations. Mr Erdogan, sitting beside Prof Schwab in a press conference, said that he had walked out because David Ignatius, a Washington Post columnist chairing the session, had not allowed him to reply to comments about the conflict in Gaza by Mr Peres. Mr Peres had spoken for 25 minutes, twice the time Mr Erdogan had spoken and five times the length of time participants had been given for their opening remarks, he said. Mr Ignatius had reached out to tap Mr Erdogan on the shoulder as his speech overran, prompting the Turkish prime minister to push him away. Mr Erdogan complained that Mr Peres had raised his voice and addressed him “in a manner not in line with…the spirit of Davos.” “I have great respect for Peres and for his age,” he said, but what the Israeli leader had said about Gaza was “not true because history refutes it and political science too”. Mr Erdogan said at the press conference he would talk to Mr Schwab about whether to return, but a repeat of the moderation “would cast a shadow over efforts to reach peace.” “I always yield when it is necessary but that does not mean I will always take the lower hand,” he said. Amr Moussa, secretary general of the Arab League and another participant in the debate, told the Financial Times the moderation had been “simply unfair”. Israel has long regarded Turkey as its closest ally among Muslim states, and has traditionally enjoyed diplomatic, commercial and military ties with Ankara. When the current Israeli government started its latest peace initiative with Syria, which has since been frozen, Turkey acted as the principal mediator. However, relations have taken a turn for the worse since Israel launched its offensive against the Gaza Strip in late December.





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