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Erdoğan blasts U.S. crackdown on pro-Palestine campus protests

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan expressed concern about the U.S. college campus protests on Thursday, denouncing what he perceived as authorities' use of "cruelty" to suppress pro-Palestinian students and academics. "Conscientious students and academics including anti-Zionist Jews at some prestigious American universities are protesting the massacre (in Gaza). These people are being subjected to violence, cruelty, suffering, and even torture for saying the massacre has to stop," Erdoğan told an event in Ankara.

Agencies and A News WORLD
Published May 02,2024
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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan paid sufficient attention to the U.S. college campus protests on Thursday, saying authorities were displaying "cruelty" in clamping down on pro-Palestinian students and academics.

Demonstrations have spread on campuses across the United States over Israel's conduct of the war in Gaza, prompting police crackdowns and arrests at some venues such as Columbia University in New York.

"Conscientious students and academics including anti-Zionist Jews at some prestigious American universities are protesting the massacre (in Gaza)," Erdoğan told an event in Ankara.

"These people are being subjected to violence, cruelty, suffering, and even torture for saying the massacre has to stop," he said, adding that university staff were being "sacked and lynched" for supporting the Palestinians.

Türkiye, a NATO ally of the United States, has sharply criticised Israel's assault on Gaza and what it calls the unconditional support it receives from Western countries.

The U.S. is a top supplier of military aid to Israel and has shielded the country from critical United Nations votes.

"The limits of Western democracy are drawn by Israel's interests," Erdoğan said. "Whatever infringes on Israel's interests is anti-democratic, antisemitic for them."

More than 34,000 people have been killed in Gaza during Israel's nearly seven-month military offensive, Palestinian health officials say, after Hamas fighters killed some 1,200 people and took 253 hostages during an Oct. 7 assault on southern Israel, according to Israeli tallies.