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Turkish navy to re-enact goodwill voyage to Japan
03 January 2015 21:56 (Last updated 04 January 2015 19:34)
Prime Minister Davutoglu says journey will mark the sinking of an Ottoman frigate, Ertugrul, on its 125th anniversary in October 2015.
OSMANIYE, Turkey
The Turkish navy will launch an expedition to commemorate the sinking of an Ottoman frigate on a goodwill voyage to Japan in 1890.
The expedition will follow a route through Indian Ocean East Asia to reach Japan, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Saturday.
"Turkey will once again carry the flag of friendship which Ertugrul Frigate took with it 125 years ago," said Davutoglu in the southern province of Osmaniye during the groundbreaking ceremony of an iron and steel production facility under a Turkish-Japanese joint enterprise.
The prime minister said the decision to revive the voyage came during an earlier meeting with Necdet Ozel, the chief of the general staff.
More than 580 sailors died and only 69 others survived when the frigate was caught in a typhoon off the coast of Wakayama Prefecture, and subsequently drifted into a reef and sank off Kushimoto.
The people of Kushimoto helped the stranded sailors, an event seen as a milestone in the historic friendly ties between Turkey and Japan.
Turkish navy to re-enact goodwill voyage to Japan Anadolu Agency
03 January 2015 21:56 (Last updated 04 January 2015 19:34)
Prime Minister Davutoglu says journey will mark the sinking of an Ottoman frigate, Ertugrul, on its 125th anniversary in October 2015.
OSMANIYE, Turkey
The Turkish navy will launch an expedition to commemorate the sinking of an Ottoman frigate on a goodwill voyage to Japan in 1890.
The expedition will follow a route through Indian Ocean East Asia to reach Japan, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Saturday.
"Turkey will once again carry the flag of friendship which Ertugrul Frigate took with it 125 years ago," said Davutoglu in the southern province of Osmaniye during the groundbreaking ceremony of an iron and steel production facility under a Turkish-Japanese joint enterprise.
The prime minister said the decision to revive the voyage came during an earlier meeting with Necdet Ozel, the chief of the general staff.
More than 580 sailors died and only 69 others survived when the frigate was caught in a typhoon off the coast of Wakayama Prefecture, and subsequently drifted into a reef and sank off Kushimoto.
The people of Kushimoto helped the stranded sailors, an event seen as a milestone in the historic friendly ties between Turkey and Japan.
Turkish navy to re-enact goodwill voyage to Japan Anadolu Agency