Arab News

German defense minister rejects Turkey complaint over search

- AP Berlin

Germany’s defense minister on Tuesday rejected Turkey’s complaints over the search of a Turkish freighter in the Mediterran­ean Sea by a German frigate participat­ing in a European mission, insisting that German sailors acted correctly.

Sunday’s incident prompted Turkey to summon diplomats representi­ng the EU, Germany and Italy and assert that the Libyabound freighter Rosaline-A was subjected to an “illegal” search by personnel from the German frigate Hamburg. The German ship is part of the European Union’s Irini naval mission, which is enforcing an arms embargo against Libya. German officials say that the order to board the ship came from Irini’s headquarte­rs in Rome and that Turkey protested while the team was on board. The search was then ended.

Turkey says the search was “unauthoriz­ed and conducted by force.”

German

Defense

Minister

Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r backed the German crew’s actions. “It is important to me to make really clear that the Bundeswehr soldiers behaved completely correctly,” she said during an appearance in Berlin. “They did what is asked of them in the framework of the European Irini mandate.”

“That there is this debate with

the Turkish side points to one of the fundamenta­l problems of this European mission,” KrampKarre­nbauer added, without elaboratin­g. “But it is very important to me to say clearly here that there are no grounds for these accusation­s that are now being made against the soldiers.”

This was the second incident between Turkey and naval forces from a NATO ally enforcing an arms blockade against Libya. In June, NATO launched an investigat­ion over an incident between Turkish warships and a French naval vessel in the Mediterran­ean, after France said one of its frigates was “lit up” three times by Turkish naval targeting radar when it tried to approach a Turkish civilian ship suspected of involvemen­t in arms traffickin­g. Turkey supports a UN-backed government in Tripoli against rival forces based in the country’s east. It has complained that the EU naval operation focuses its efforts too much on the Tripoli administra­tion and turns a blind eye to weapons sent to the eastern-based forces. In Ankara, Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said that Irini was “flawed from the onset.”

“It is not based on firm internatio­nal legal foundation­s,” Akar said. He renewed Turkey’s criticism of the German ship’s actions. “The incident was against internatio­nal laws and practices. It was wrong,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia