<p>Turkish President <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/recep-tayyip-erdogan" target="_blank">Tayyip Erdogan </a>told Israel's former <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/benjamin-netanyahu" target="_blank">Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu</a>, who won an election this month, that it is important to maintain relations on a basis of respect for mutual interests, the Turkish presidency said on Thursday.</p>.<p>In a phone call, Erdogan told Netanyahu he was saddened by "events two days ago in the West Bank". Netanyahu offered his condolences for those who died in a bomb attack in Istanbul on Sunday, the presidency said.</p>.<p>"The two leaders agreed to work together to create a new era in relations between Turkey and Israel," Netanyahu's Likud Party said in a statement, adding that they discussed how to strengthen economic and diplomatic ties.</p>.<p>The call comes amid a thaw in long-strained ties between Turkey and Israel. Israeli President Isaac Herzog visited Ankara this year in the first visit to Turkey by an Israeli leader since 2008.</p>.<p>Relations between Israel and Turkey have been strained for more than a decade, with Ankara having expelled Israel's ambassador following a 2010 Israeli raid on an aid ship to Gaza, which killed ten Turkish citizens.</p>.<p>Diplomatic relations were restored in 2016, but two years later Turkey recalled its diplomats from Israel and expelled Israeli envoys when Israeli forces killed a number of Palestinians who had taken part in protests in the Gaza Strip.</p>.<p>The two countries mutually appointed ambassadors this year.</p>.<p>A Palestinian killed three Israelis near a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday and was hailed by Islamist militants as a hero, hours before Israel swore in lawmakers set to return Netanyahu to power atop a hard-right coalition.</p>
<p>Turkish President <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/recep-tayyip-erdogan" target="_blank">Tayyip Erdogan </a>told Israel's former <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/benjamin-netanyahu" target="_blank">Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu</a>, who won an election this month, that it is important to maintain relations on a basis of respect for mutual interests, the Turkish presidency said on Thursday.</p>.<p>In a phone call, Erdogan told Netanyahu he was saddened by "events two days ago in the West Bank". Netanyahu offered his condolences for those who died in a bomb attack in Istanbul on Sunday, the presidency said.</p>.<p>"The two leaders agreed to work together to create a new era in relations between Turkey and Israel," Netanyahu's Likud Party said in a statement, adding that they discussed how to strengthen economic and diplomatic ties.</p>.<p>The call comes amid a thaw in long-strained ties between Turkey and Israel. Israeli President Isaac Herzog visited Ankara this year in the first visit to Turkey by an Israeli leader since 2008.</p>.<p>Relations between Israel and Turkey have been strained for more than a decade, with Ankara having expelled Israel's ambassador following a 2010 Israeli raid on an aid ship to Gaza, which killed ten Turkish citizens.</p>.<p>Diplomatic relations were restored in 2016, but two years later Turkey recalled its diplomats from Israel and expelled Israeli envoys when Israeli forces killed a number of Palestinians who had taken part in protests in the Gaza Strip.</p>.<p>The two countries mutually appointed ambassadors this year.</p>.<p>A Palestinian killed three Israelis near a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday and was hailed by Islamist militants as a hero, hours before Israel swore in lawmakers set to return Netanyahu to power atop a hard-right coalition.</p>