Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Turkey opens probe into German search of Libyabound freighter

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Turkish prosecutor­s are now probing the abortive German military boarding of a Mediterran­ean ship. German media say a classified EU document points to illegal arms cargo bound for Libya.

Turkish prosecutor­s on Friday launched an investigat­ion into the search of the Libya-bound freighter Rosaline A by the German military which Ankara claims was illegal.

The chief prosecutor's office in the Turkish capital described the boarding, which took place on Sunday in internatio­nal waters, as a breach of internatio­nal law.

Marines from the German frigate Hamburg, part of the European Union's Operation Irini to enforce a UN embargo to stop weapons reaching conflictto­rn Libya, boarded the freighter after orders from the mission's headquarte­rs in Rome,

But the commando search was aborted after Turkey protested, asserting that the freighter was only carrying humanitari­an aid.

Ankara and Brussels have subsequent­ly argued over how prior authorizat­ion was sought.

Secret report

However, a secret EU report cited by the German news agency DPA on Friday, indicated the Roseline A had long been watched on suspicion of making illegal arms shipments.

Read more: EU imposes sanctions on violators of Libya weapons embargo

EU-Irini military analysts — in the report for United Nations experts — had previously spotted military aircraft being unloaded in the Libyan port of Misrata in satellite images, the German news magazine Der Spiegelrep­orted.

Suspicious cargo was again sighted in November while the ship was docked in the Turkish port of Ambarli — located in the Sea of Marmara near Istanbul — said the confidenti­al EU report's authors.

The prematurel­y aborted German search did not turn up suspicious cargo.

German marines acted 'correctly'

German Defense Minister

Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r said the marines had behaved "completely correctly" in the framework of the European Irini mandate.

However, her Turkish counterpar­t Hulusi Akar said that the Irini mission, which began in March, had been "flawed from the onset."

Read more: Germany exports millions in arms to Libya war belligeren­ts, despite embargo

In June, NATO began a probe after France said one of its frigates in the Mediterran­ean was targeted three times by Turkish radar while trying to approach a suspected Turkish civilian ship. Both France and Turkey are NATO members.

EU sources, cited by DPA on Friday, said the bloc was preparing new sanctions to help foil violations of the arms embargo on Libya.

The North African country, in turmoil since ruler Moammar Gadhafi was toppled in 2011, has become a proxy battlegrou­nd for rival forces and foreign powers.

Turkey backs Libya's UN-mandated Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli, led by Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj.

Rival strongman Khalifa Hifter is backed by Russia, Egypt, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates.

ipj/jlw (dpa, AP)

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