Palestinian Authority Unperturbed by Ankara-Tel Aviv Rapprochement

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan shakes hands with his Israeli counterpart Isaac Herzog during their meeting in Ankara, Turkey March 9, 2022. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan shakes hands with his Israeli counterpart Isaac Herzog during their meeting in Ankara, Turkey March 9, 2022. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)
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Palestinian Authority Unperturbed by Ankara-Tel Aviv Rapprochement

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan shakes hands with his Israeli counterpart Isaac Herzog during their meeting in Ankara, Turkey March 9, 2022. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan shakes hands with his Israeli counterpart Isaac Herzog during their meeting in Ankara, Turkey March 9, 2022. (Presidential Press Office/Handout via Reuters)

The Palestinian Authority (PA) is not worried about the latest Ankara-Tel Aviv rapprochement, but considers the entente as an opportunity to push forward the Palestinian cause, Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad Al-Maliki told CNN Turkiye on Sunday.

“We are very happy about this rapprochement,” he said, stressing that Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu informed him that the recent meeting between both sides would not be at the expense of the Palestinians.

“This entente would offer the Palestinians potential means of pressure in the event of the resumption of negotiations between the two parties,” the Palestinian Minister said, adding that the PA would welcome a Turkish suggestion to sponsor negotiations with Israel.

Last week, Israeli President Isaac Herzog met with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara for the first such trip by an Israeli leader since 2008.

Herzog quoted his Turkish counterpart as showing readiness to deal with a number of disputed issues between both sides, and he expressed a common goal of Turkey and Israel to revive bilateral political dialogue based on common interests.

The Hamas Movement, which enjoys close ties with Ankara, condemned the meeting, but avoided calling out Turkey by name.

Also, the Islamic Jihad strongly denounced Herzog’s Turkey trip, calling it “an abandonment of Palestinian.”

Their positions came as reports said Israel reportedly asked Turkey to expel Hamas officials from Ankara.

Diplomatic relations between Turkey and Israel deteriorated in 2018 in the wake of border clashes with Gaza that saw dozens of Palestinians killed.

Turkey recalled its diplomats and ordered Israel's envoy out of the country.

The incident halted years of gradual reconciliation following a row over a 2010 Israeli raid on an aid ship sailing towards Gaza that killed nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists. A tenth activist wounded in the incident died in 2014 after years in a coma.

The PA wants Turkey to play a role in pushing efforts to launch a political process between the two sides. The request was presented to the International Quartet and other influential countries in recent years.

But so far, Israel has refused to engage in political talks, focusing only on talks to support the Palestinians at the economic and security levels.

On Sunday, the Palestinian Foreign Ministry called on the international community to stop the policy of double standards in dealing with the Palestinians and to take courageous stands by implementing the relevant United Nations resolutions and imposing sanctions on Israel.



Germany Hands Syrian Doctor Life for Torturing Assad Critics

Syrian doctor Alaa M., accused of crimes against humanity, arrives for his judgment in the security room of the Higher Regional Court in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 16 June 2025. (EPA)
Syrian doctor Alaa M., accused of crimes against humanity, arrives for his judgment in the security room of the Higher Regional Court in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 16 June 2025. (EPA)
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Germany Hands Syrian Doctor Life for Torturing Assad Critics

Syrian doctor Alaa M., accused of crimes against humanity, arrives for his judgment in the security room of the Higher Regional Court in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 16 June 2025. (EPA)
Syrian doctor Alaa M., accused of crimes against humanity, arrives for his judgment in the security room of the Higher Regional Court in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 16 June 2025. (EPA)

A Syrian doctor who had practiced in Germany was sentenced to life in prison by a German court on Monday for crimes against humanity and war crimes after he was found guilty of torturing dissidents in Syria.

The 40-year-old, identified only as Alaa M. in accordance with German privacy laws, was found guilty of killing two people and torturing another eight during his time working in Syria as a doctor at a military hospital and detention center in Homs in 2011 and 2012.

The court said his crimes were part of a systematic attack against people protesting against then-President Bashar al-Assad that precipitated the country's civil war.

Assad was toppled in December. His government denied it tortured prisoners.

Alaa M. arrived in Germany in 2015, after fleeing to Germany among a large influx of Syrian refugees, and became one of roughly 10,000 Syrian medics who helped ease acute staff shortages in the country's healthcare system.

He was arrested in June 2020, and was handed a life sentence without parole, the Higher Regional Court in Frankfurt said in a statement.

The defendant had pleaded not guilty, saying he was the target of a conspiracy.

German prosecutors have used universal jurisdiction laws that allow them to seek trials for suspects in crimes against humanity committed anywhere in the world.

They have targeted several former Syrian officials in similar cases in recent years.

The plaintiffs were supported by the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights.

ECCHR lawyer Patrick Kroker called Monday's ruling "a further step towards a comprehensive reckoning with Assad's crimes".

Judges found that the doctor caused "considerable physical suffering" as a result of the torture inflicted on his victims, which included serious beatings, mistreating wounds and inflicting serious injury to the genitals of two prisoners, one of whom was a teenage boy.

Two patients died after he gave them lethal medication, the court statement said.

Monday's ruling can be appealed.