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Interior Minister Besir Atalay said Turkey had beefed up security to protect its Jewish minority as well as Israel's diplomatic missions. He said security provisions were intensified at 20 points in Istanbul alone. The city has several synagogues and Jewish centers. The moves came as hundreds of Turks protested Israel's commando raid for a third day Wednesday and Israeli diplomats' families began packing to leave following orders from the Israeli government. In the past, there have been occasional attacks on Turkey's Jewish community of 23,000 people. In 2003, al-Qaida-linked suicide bombers attacked the British consulate, a British bank and two Jewish synagogues in Istanbul, killing 58 people. In 1986, gunmen killed 22 people in an attack on Istanbul's Neve Shalom synagogue. On Monday, hours after Israeli marines stormed the Turkish ship, a Turk threw a punch at an Israeli cyclist at international cycling race in northwestern Turkey. The cyclist dodged the punch and police arrested the man. Most of Turkey's Jews are descendants of people expelled from Spain in 1492 for refusing to convert to Christianity, and were welcomed by Ottoman Sultan Beyazit. Other Jews found refuge in Turkey after fleeing Nazi persecution during World War II.
[Associated
Press;
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