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INTERNATIONAL > Jordanian King Abdullah moved to tears at Atatürk mausoleum

ANKARA – Anatolia News Agency

Jordanian King Abdullah II. AA photos

Jordanian King Abdullah II. AA photos

Jordanian King Abdullah II shed tears today as he visited Anıtkabir, the mausoleum dedicated to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of modern Turkey.

Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek accompanied King Abdullah during his visit to Anıtkabir in Ankara.

After the visit, King Abdullah was welcomed by Turkish President Abdullah Gül with a formal ceremony at the Çankaya presidential palace.

Gül’s wife, Hayrünnisa Gül, accompanied Jordanian Queen Rania Abdullah at the ceremony. Following the ceremony, a commemorative photograph was taken before the Gate of Honor.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek and Presidential Secretary General Mustafa İsen attended the ceremony. King Abdullah arrived in Turkey’s capital on a two-day official visit and expects to leave Turkey March.6.

Jordan urges inclusive transition in Syria

Jordanian King Abdullah II called on the Syrian regime to move toward an “inclusive transition” to prevent the breakup of the war-torn country.

“Only an inclusive transition will stop sectarian conflict and avoid the fragmentation of Syria,” the king said at a press conference with President Abdullah Gül. King Abdullah said there was an “urgent need” for a political transition to stop the bloodshed and “preserve the territorial integrity” of Syria, where the nearly two-year-old conflict has claimed around 70,000 lives, according to U.N. figures.

Gül said the conflict has sent half a million refugees to neighboring Jordan and Turkey, where leaders frequently call for international aid to cope with an influx that has drained their emergency resources. The United Nations is calling for $1.5 billion to help nearly one million Syrian refugees and four million other Syrians affected by the conflict but who remain inside the country, over the coming months.

March/05/2013

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M. Yakut

3/10/2013 3:22:11 PM

Mustafa Kemal Ataturk is one of the greatest leaders of 20th century, if not the greatest one given the circumstances of the world, and especially political, economical and social conditions of of the land which Turkey exists today. King Abdullah is a modernist reformer and clearly appreciates what Mustafa Kemal did for the people of the land in 1920-1930s. Was he perferct? Of course not, as no one or nothing is. To understand Mustafa Kemal motives and moves, one should definitely study him.

Ayazid

3/7/2013 1:15:05 PM

@ david coors & Mike & Rich, and according to the same logic, shouldn't Turkey apologize for the fact that they left Algeria, Tunisia and Libya to their faith when they were attacked by colonialist powers? Wasn't that also an example of treason and Turkish lack of friendship towards Arabs? This sort of xenophobic mentality which looks to the past in order to foment hatred and prejudice is ridiculous.

Ayazid

3/7/2013 12:58:34 PM

@ Rich, the Yemeni war has no relation with some supposed deep-rooted Arab hatered towards Turks. That society is heavily tribalist and unstable even today. When Egypt send thousands of their soldiers there in 60's they also suffered many casualties. Something similar can be said about the later revolt in Hijaz. It was basically a local tribal thing. It's lamentable that some Kemalist Turks still use this as an argument for fomenting anti-Arab prejudices.

Mohammed Abduselam

3/7/2013 12:23:18 PM

He is Characters is Showing very Amateurish and Pathetic.....iam sure if somebody ask who was Ataturk,he wouldn't Answer Enough..Shame on you there are alot of things worth to shed tears for

Levent OfCeramorium

3/7/2013 11:13:48 AM

@Ender; my comment has been censored altough contained no insult whatsoever. Need I say more?

Mike Newman

3/7/2013 4:01:47 AM

Burning history books will not change Arab culture or Arab hostility or Arab's lack of friendship toward Turks. As soon as they are offered a few shining coins, they will turn against Turks. Remember that.

Rich Murphy

3/7/2013 1:31:38 AM

3. to find his wife dead of cholera and his own and the children of his brother in law grew up in streets of Izmir invaded by Greece who also burned the city and massacred untold number of innocent Turks, and in obsolete poverty. My great-grand father used to say Yemeni Arabs hidden in holes in the dessert sand and ambushed young Turk soldiers in Ottoman uniform, cut their bellies open alive looking for gold coins in their intestines.

Rich Murphy

3/7/2013 1:30:46 AM

2. One of their victims was my great-grand father who was sent to Yemen to fight against British and Arab terrorists to defend Arab religion Islam against "the infidel" (mostly British, French and of course USA) several years before WWI started. After WWI was lost with tens of thousands of his comrades including his fellow soldier and brother in law dead, he returned home (on foot which took him nearly a year hiding during days, walking at nights, hungry, cold and penniless, begging for food)

Rich Murphy

3/7/2013 1:28:23 AM

If Turkiye has learned any lesson from how Arabs treated Turks in the near past, it would never get involved in their problems again. I am sure Turks (supposedly Arabs' brothers in Islam), who were massacred by Arabs who cooperated with the victors of WWI to topple Ottoman Empire are turning in their graves. AK Party and PM Erdoğan, failed to learn that lesson, are committing the most disrespect to the memories of the Turks massacred by Arab terrorists who called themselves "freedom fighters."

antalya lover

3/6/2013 10:18:08 PM

I am a Jordanian Girl who love all Turks :) let us love each other ... i wish if we can burn all history books and start again :) peace for all human :)
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