Off the wire
Construction of Trans Adriatic Pipeline kicks off in Albania  • 1st Ld Writethru: Premier calls for further reform  • Berdych, Gasquet into semis, Tomic out in Shenzhen Open  • U.S. stocks rally in last trading day of Q3  • Roundup: Cypriot court upholds Egyptian request for extradition of hijacker  • Xinhua world news summary at 1530 GMT, Sept. 30  • Hosszu grabs 3 golds, Zhu sets world junior record at FINA World Cup  • China releases sugar reserves to stabilize supply  • Russian FM expresses indignation to Kerry over "terror attacks in Russia" remarks  • Tanker-van collision kills 8 in North India  
You are here:   Home

Israel pays Turkey 20 mln USD compensation over flotilla raid in 2010

Xinhua, September 30, 2016 Adjust font size:

The Israeli government on Friday paid 20 million U.S. dollars in compensation to Turkey over the Mavi Marmara flotilla raid in 2010, private broadcaster NTV reported.

The raid led to the disruption of diplomatic ties between the two countries before a reconciliation deal was reached earlier this year.

The amount was paid to the bank account of the Turkish Justice Ministry, according to the report.

Meanwhile, Ankara and Tel Aviv would announce the appointment of ambassadors in "one week or 10 days."

Ties between Ankara and Tel Aviv have been soured since 2010 when Israeli troops stormed a Gaza-bound aid flotilla, Mavi Marmara, in international waters, 10 Turkish nationals were killed.

Israel formally apologized in 2013 for what it called "operational mistakes."

After months of talks, the normalization deal was signed between the two countries in June 2016 to end the six-year rift.

Under the deal, Israel will pay 20 million dollars in compensation for the families of victims.

In addition to the compensation, Israel agreed on Turkey's humanitarian presence in the occupied Gaza Strip. Endit