Global Times

Greece signs maritime border accord with Italy under UN rules

-

Greece on Tuesday signed a maritime border accord with Italy on the Ionian Sea, settling sovereign rights under UN rules and aiming to bolster its hand in a territoria­l dispute with Turkey.

“Today is a good day for Greece, Italy, Europe and the entire Mediterran­ean,” Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said in a statement.

Tuesday’s agreement, which updates a 1977 accord, is part of diplomatic efforts by Athens in response to what it perceives as aggressive attempts at Turkish

expansion in the Mediterran­ean.

Ankara in 2019 signed a controvers­ial agreement with Libya’s UN-recognized government in Tripoli, which claimed extensive areas of the sea for Turkey.

Analysts saw the move as part of a Turkish strategy to avoid exclusion from the gas exploratio­n scramble in the region.

But Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias said Tuesday: “Under internatio­nal law, the delimitati­on of maritime zones is carried out through legal agreements, not baseless ones...and certainly not through the one-sided submission of coordinate­s.”

Earlier, Dendias explained that the accord signed with Italian counterpar­t Luigi Di Maio confirms a 1977 continenta­l shelf agreement with Rome “and the right of islands to have maritime zones.”

This point is of particular importance for Athens in its face-off with Turkey, which denies that islands have such rights.

Tuesday’s agreement also sets out fishing rights, said Dendias, although full details were not immediatel­y available.

“Our country steadfastl­y seeks to delimitate maritime zones with all our neighbors under internatio­nal law,” Dendias added.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China