Yahoo – AFP,
September 3, 2016
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| A truck loaded with aid parcels provided by Turkey waits at the Kerem Shalom crossing near Rafah after it entered the southern Gaza Strip from Israel on July 4, 2016 (AFP Photo/SAid Khatib) |
Ankara
(AFP) - Turkish aid for the Gaza Strip has been sent from the country's
southern coast for the second time since relations were normalised between
Israel and Ankara in June, a Turkish official said Saturday.
A
humanitarian aid ship bound for southern Israel's Ashdod port left Mersin on
Friday, the official said, "the second major shipment of humanitarian aid
to Gaza since an agreement was reached".
The
shipment is the first since Turkish lawmakers ratified the deal to normalise
ties between the two countries last month.
Under the
deal, Israel will pay Turkey $20 million (17.7 million euros) in compensation
for a botched Israeli commando raid on a Gaza-bound Turkish aid ship in 2010
that left 10 Turks dead.
The
official, who did not wish to be named, said Ankara had sent 100 wheelchairs,
1,000 bicycles, 100,000 backpacks and stationery kits, 300,000 pieces of
clothing and 350,000 nappies.
The
shipment also contained 1,288 tons of flour, 170 tons of rice, 64 tons of
sugar, 95 tons of vegetable oil, the official said.
"We
expect the items to be distributed to the people of Gaza before the upcoming
Islamic holiday," the official said, referring to the Eid al-Adha holiday,
around September 12.
The first
shipment reached Gaza on July 4 just in time for the Muslim Eid celebrations
marking the end of Ramadan fasting.
Turkey's
ruling Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party has friendly ties with
Gaza's Hamas rulers, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been a vocal
supporter of the Palestinian cause.

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