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Turkey detains Israeli soccer player over Gaza war message during match

The player wrote a message referencing the "100 days" that Israel captives have been held by Hamas since their Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel.
Sagiv Yekhezkel displays a message in support of Hamas-held hostages during a match in Turkey.

An Israeli soccer player was detained on Sunday and a Turkish prosecutor launched a criminal probe against him for suspected incitement of public hatred. Sagiv Yekhezkel's purported crime was to have displayed a message on his bandage on his left wrist which read “100 days. 7.10,” after scoring a goal for his team Antalyaspor against rival Trabzonspor.

The message was a reference to the number of days an estimated 130 Israeli hostages have been held since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7. Yekhezkel was swiftly sacked from the team amid a public uproar in Turkey where pro-Palestinian sentiments championed by the country’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, run extremely high. Antalyaspor said the player had violated “the values of our country.”

“The Antalya public prosecutor’s office has opened a judicial investigation against Israeli soccer player Sagiv Yekhezkel for public incitement to hate due to his hateful celebration in favor of the massacre committed by Israel in Gaza,” Turkish Justice Minister Yilmaz said in a social media post. The pro-government news channel Ahaber gloated that Yekhezkel, “who propagandized on behalf of the occupier Israel," got his “just desserts.”

Turkey is among several countries providing documents for a case brought by South Africa against Israel at the UN's top court on a charge of committing genocide against Palestinian civilians. Erdogan told reporters on Friday, "I believe Israel will be convicted there. We believe in the justice of the International Court of Justice."

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