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Turkiye detains 34 Mossad agents suspected of spying for Israel

ISTANBUL: Turkiye announced on Tuesday it had detained 34 people suspected of planning abductions and spying on behalf of Israel's Mossad intelligence service.

The raids came just weeks after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned of "serious consequences" should Israel try to target figures from Palestinian group Hamas living or working in Turkey.

Turkiye does not view Hamas as a terrorist organisation and has hosted the Islamic group's political leaders for much of the past decade.

A Turkish security source told AFP that most of the 34 people detained were foreign nationals whom Mossad recruited for "operations targeting Palestinians and their family members."

"We are determined to ensure that absolutely no foreign intelligence agency can operate on Turkish soil without proper authorisation," the security source said.

Turkish government released video footage showing armed security service agents breaking down doors and handcuffing suspects in their homes.

The Istanbul public prosecutor's office said 12 additional suspects remained at large.

"There is an insidious operation and sabotage attempts being made against Turkiye and its interests," Erdogan said after the raids were announced.

Relations between Turkiye and Israel imploded following the outbreak of the war in Gaza nearly three months ago.

Erdogan has turned into one of the world's harshest critics of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The Turkish leader last week compared Netanyahu to Adolf Hitler and demanded that Israel's Western allies drop their support for the "terrorism" being conducted by Israeli troops in Gaza.

Erdogan has also recalled Ankara's envoy to Tel Aviv, and pushed for the trial of Israeli commanders and political leaders at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

The president's ruling Islamic, conservative AKP party also led tens of thousands of protesters out on the streets of Istanbul on Monday for one of Turkiye's biggest rallies against the Israeli government of the entire war.

The war in Gaza has put an end to a gradual thawing in Turkish-Israeli relations that culminated with the reappointment of ambassadors in 2022.

Israel and Turkiye resumed long-stalled talks about a major Mediterranean Sea natural gas pipeline project that could have reshaped geopolitical alliances across parts of the Middle East.

Turkiye won words of gratitude from Israel in 2022 for detaining a group of Turkish and Iranian nationals were allegedly planning to murder and kidnap Israeli tourists in Istanbul.

Erdogan and Netanyahu met briefly on the sidelines of a United Nations meeting in New York in September and were discussing holding a formal summit this year.

The Turkish MIT intelligence service conducts periodic raids against suspected Israel operatives working in major cities such as Ankara and Istanbul.

Most are accused of conducting surveillance work on Palestinians living in Turkiye.

Istanbul served as one of Hamas's foreign political offices until the outbreak of the Gaza war.

Turkey informally asked Hamas leaders to leave, days after fighters conducted raids into southern Israel on October 7 that resulted in the deaths of around 1,140 people – most of them civilians – according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

The Islamists also took around 250 people hostage. Israeli officials believe more than half of them remain in Gaza.

The Gaza health ministry says Israel's relentless military campaign targeting Hamas has killed around 22,000 people in Gaza since October 7 – mostly women and children.

UN agencies have voiced alarm over a spiralling humanitarian crisis facing Gaza's 2.4 million people.

Most have seen their homes destroyed and now face dire shortages of food, water, fuel and medicine, and are surviving in tents and shelters amid the rubble.--AFP

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