'Israel, Turkey to exchange ambassadors after talks'

National security adviser Yaakov Amidror says compensation deal with families of 'Mavi Marmara' victims expected shortly.

mavi marmara flotilla_311 reuters (photo credit: Osman Orsal / Reuters)
mavi marmara flotilla_311 reuters
(photo credit: Osman Orsal / Reuters)
BEIJING/JERUSALEM - Israel and Turkey will exchange ambassadors shortly after an agreement on compensation over the Mavi Marmara is completely hashed out National Security Adviser Yaakov Amidror said Wednesday in Beijing.
Amidror arrived in Beijing on Wednesday, two days after meeting a Turkish delegation for the second round of talks over the compensation package.
Amidror missed the Shanghai leg of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's five day visit to China because of his meeting with the Turkish delegation.
"It was a very good meeting and I hope that in a short time the agreement will be completed," he said. A number of issues were agreed upon, he added, and some were outstanding, but he refused to elaborate.
"Until everything is agreed upon, nothing is agreed upon, he said, adding that he expected the agreement to be completed shortly.
Once the agreement is final, he said there is only a short time, a technical period, before ambassadors are exchanged.
Turkish officials, however, were slightly less optimistic on Wednesday.
According to the Hurriyet Daily News, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said that the delegations from both countries had yet to agree on a compensation figures.
Compensation payment to the families of nine Turkish activists the IDF killed when they boarded the Gaza-bound Mavi Marmara ship to stop it from breaking Israel’s naval blockade of the area, is a key component of the reconciliation agreement.
“Work on compensation has not yet been finalized. There has not been a consensus on some important subjects,” Arinc said, according to Hurriyet.
Arinc said that the two delegations might need to meet for a third time to hammer out all the details, according to Hurriyet.
According to Turkish newspaper Today's Zamen, there are reports that Turkey wants Israel to pay $1 million to each of the nine families, whereas Israel only wants to pay $100,000 per family.
On Monday night, Israel’s Prime Ministers’ Office said that a draft agreement was reached in Jerusalem between Israeli and Turkish official that would mend the three-year diplomatic crisis between the two countries.
“The two sides expect to come to an agreement in the near future,” said a statement released by the Prime Minister’s Office after an eight hour meeting between Israeli and Turkish delegations in the Foreign Ministry on Monday.
“The meeting was conducted in a good and positive manner. The delegations reached an agreed draft, but further clarifications are required on certain subjects,” the PMO said.