ANKARA:- President Tayyip Erdogan has hinted that Turkeyinfo-icon might consider imposing a ban on imports of some Israeli goods over the killing of Palestinian protesters by Israeli forces on the Gazainfo-icon border, mediainfo-icon reported on Tuesday. 

Erdogan, who is campaigning for re-election in June, last week hosted Musliminfo-icon leaders who condemned the events in Gaza and the opening of the United Statesinfo-icon embassy in Jerusaleminfo-icon.Speaking to reporters on a return flight from Bosniainfo-icon on Sunday, Erdogan said the 57-member Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OICinfo-icon) had recommended that a boycott be imposed on Israeli goods. 

"I hope that OIC member countries implement a boycott decision in line with the recommendation. Consequently, no product should be brought from there any more. Naturally we will assess this situation in the same way," Hurriyet newspaper reported Erdogan as saying. 

A declaration by the OIC on Friday repeated a call for countries to ban "products of the illegal Israeli settlements from entering their markets," referring to goods produced in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Golan Heights. 

It did not seek a ban on all Israeli goods.The declaration also called for "economic restrictions (on) countries, officials, parliaments, companies or individuals" who followed the United States and moved their embassies to Jerusalem. 

USinfo-icon President Donald Trumpinfo-icon's move to recognize Jerusalem as Israelinfo-icon's capital and shift the US embassy there reversed decades of US policy, upsetting the Arab worldinfo-icon and Western allies. 

Erdogan said last week that Trump's move had emboldened Israel to put down the protests at the border with Gaza with excessive force, likening the actions of Israeli forces to Nazi Germanyinfo-icon's treatment of Jews in World Warinfo-icon Two, when millions were killed in concentration camps. 

The violence in Gaza, where more than 60 Palestinians were killed on May 14 led to Turkey and Israel expelling each other's senior diplomats. Erdogan also traded barbs on Twitterinfo-icon with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 

Israel was the 10th-largest marketinfo-icon for Turkish exports in 2017, buying some $3.4 billion of goods, according to IMFinfo-icon statistics.Data from Turkey's statistics institute showed that trade volume between the two was at $4.9 billion in 2017. Turkey, which has a trade surplus with Israel, imports plastics and mineral oils among other goods from there. 

Erdogan said Turkey would reconsider its ties with Israel. 

"We will put our relations on the table, in particular our economic and trade relations. We have an election ahead of us. After the election we will take our steps in this direction," Erdogan was quoted as saying.