The Borneo Post

Lira steady after Turkey says US waging ‘economic war’

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ISTANBUL: The Turkish lira was little changed yesterday after Turkey accused Washington of waging ‘economic war’ and failing to respect its legal system over the fate of an evangelica­l Christian pastor whose trial in Turkey has soured ties between the NATO allies.

At 0453GMT yesterday, the lira stood at 6.0314 against the dollar, sticking close to Wednesday’s close of 6.0330 and down 37 per cent this year.

Trade was thinner than usual and probably mainly offshore as Turkish markets closed on Monday for a week’s holiday to mark the Muslim Eid al-Adha festival.

President Tayyip Erdogan’s spokesman said comments by President Donald Trump’s national security adviser showed the US is targeting Turkey’s economy and he said it was not reflecting NATO’s fundamenta­l principles and values.

“His statement is proof that the Trump administra­tion is targeting a NATO ally as part of an economic war,” spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said in a statement to Reuters late on Wednesday, responding to comments by Trump adviser John Bolton.

“The Trump administra­tion has... establishe­d that it intends to use trade, tariffs and sanctions to start a global trade war,” Kalin said, pointing to similar disputes with Mexico, Canada, Europe and China.

Bolton told Reuters during a visit to Israel he was skeptical about the pledge of US$15 billion of investment support for Turkey by Qatar’s emir, which was “utterly insufficie­nt to have an impact on Turkey’s economy”.

He also said Turkey had made a “big mistake” in not freeing pastor Andrew Brunson, who has lived in Turkey for two decades and has been detained for 21 months on terrorism charges. He denies the accusation­s and is now under house arrest.

Kalin called on Washington to respect Turkey’s judicial independen­ce, one of Ankara’s most pointed responses yet to criticism over Brunson’s detention. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A cyclist passes the Federal Reserve building in Washington, DC, US. An escalation of ongoing US trade disputes poses a ‘consequent­ial downside risk’ to the economy, which will make the job of the central bank more challengin­g, the US Federal Reserve warned. — Reuters photo
A cyclist passes the Federal Reserve building in Washington, DC, US. An escalation of ongoing US trade disputes poses a ‘consequent­ial downside risk’ to the economy, which will make the job of the central bank more challengin­g, the US Federal Reserve warned. — Reuters photo

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