Hamas plots attacks on Israel from Turkey: Report

Turkey is allowing senior Hamas operatives to plot attacks against Israel from Istanbul, The Telegraph reported citing transcripts of Israeli police interrogations with suspects. The Turkish government has offered Hamas safe harbor in Istanbul, the daily said, even as Arab states such as Saudi Arabia have distanced themselves from the group and moved closer to Israel.

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Senior Hamas operatives are reportedly using Istanbul to plot attacks against Israel, including an assassination attempt earlier this year on the mayor of Jerusalem, as Turkish authorities continue to host the group's leaders.

Transcripts of Israeli police interrogations with suspects show that senior Hamas operatives are using Turkey’s largest city to direct operations in Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank, The Telegraph reported on Dec. 17.

Israel has repeatedly told Turkey that Hamas is using its territory to plan attacks, but last weekend President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan met Ismail Haniyeh, the head of Hamas, and Turkish intelligence agents maintain close contact with the group’s operatives in Istanbul.

"We will keep on supporting our brothers in Palestine," Erdoğan said.

Turkey agreed in a U.S.-brokered 2015 deal with Israel to stop Hamas planning attacks from its soil but has consistently failed to honor the agreement, Israeli officials said.

The issue has fueled hostility between the two states, even though they maintain diplomatic relations.

"Israel is extremely concerned that Turkey is allowing Hamas terrorists to operate from its territory, in planning and engaging in terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians," its foreign ministry said.

The Turkish government has offered Hamas safe harbor in Istanbul, the daily said, even as Arab states such as Saudi Arabia have distanced themselves from the group and moved closer to Israel.

Hamas is considered a terrorist group by the European Union and the United States. Its armed wing has been designated a terror group by the UK.

Turkey has proved such a welcoming environment for Hamas that the group’s deputy leader, who has a $5 million U.S. government bounty on his head, travels freely to the country without fear of arrest.

A dozen Hamas operatives have moved to Istanbul from the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip in the past year, according to Israeli and Egyptian intelligence records.

Among them is the former leader of a suicide bombing cell responsible for some of the bloodiest attacks in Israel in the nineties, The Telegraph said.

In one failed plot in February, a Hamas official ordered a Palestinian to assassinate Jerusalem’s mayor, an MP from Benjamin Netanyahu’s party or Israel’s chief of police. The plot failed. In another case, a Hamas operative offered to pay $20,000 to the family of any would-be suicide bomber.

A Turkish diplomatic source denied Hamas was planning attacks from Turkey. He said the group was "not a terrorist organisation" but a legitimate Palestinian political party. Hamas denied planning attacks from Turkish soil and dismissed Israel’s complaints as "baseless allegations" designed to damage political relations with Turkey.

"Hamas’s resistance activities are conducted only in the land of occupied Palestine," a Hamas spokesman said.