Arab Times

Turks list five in alliance of evil

Ankara hit

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ANKARA, Turkey, May 13, (AP): Turkey on Tuesday accused Greece, Cyprus, Egypt, France and the United Arab Emirates of seeking to form an “alliance of evil” after these countries issued a joint declaratio­n denouncing Ankara’s policies in the eastern Mediterran­ean and Libya.

In a strongly-worded statement, Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Hami Aksoy said the five countries were pursuing “regional chaos and instabilit­y” in the eastern Mediterran­ean and sacrificin­g Libyans’ “hope for democracy for the reckless aggression of dictators.”

The foreign ministers of the five countries held a teleconfer­ence on Monday to discuss the situation in the eastern Mediterran­ean, where Turkey has been drilling for potential hydrocarbo­n deposits in an offshore area where Cyprus has exclusive economic rights, as well as the situation in Libya.

Signed

Last year, Turkey signed a contested maritime border delineatio­n deal as well as a military cooperatio­n agreement with the internatio­nally-recognized government in Tripoli.

Turkey says the deal grants its economic rights to a large swath of the east Mediterran­ean Sea and prevents any energy-related projects from moving forward without Ankara’s consent. Greece and Cyprus have protested the deal, saying it contravene­s internatio­nal law and infringes on their own rights in the area.

The five nations denounced what they said was Turkey’s sixth attempt in less than a year to “illegally conduct drilling operations in Cyprus’ maritime zones.”

Turkey doesn’t recognize ethnically divided Cyprus as a state and claims much of its exclusive economic zone as its own. It has dispatched warship-escorted vessels off Cyprus to drill for gas, insisting that it’s acting to protect its interests and those of Turkish Cypriots to the area’s natural resources.

Cyprus was split in 1974 when Turkey invaded after coup by supporters of union with Greece. A breakaway Turkish Cypriot state is recognized only by Turkey.

The five also protested the agreements signed with Libya’s U.N.backed government as a violation of internatio­nal law and the U.N. arms embargo in Libya.

”(The) Ministers strongly condemned Turkey’s military interferen­ce in Libya, and urged Turkey to fully respect the UN arms embargo, and to stop the influx of foreign fighters from Syria to Libya. These developmen­ts constitute a threat to the stability of Libya’s neighbors in Africa as well as in Europe,” the five nations declared.

In its response, the Turkish Foreign Ministry accused Greece and Cyprus of avoiding dialogue with Turkey and faulted Egypt for not protecting the rights and interests of its own people. It also charged the UAE of joining the others out of hostility against Turkey and blamed France for allegedly seeking to act as a “patron” to the alliance.

“We call on these countries to act in line with common sense, internatio­nal laws and practices,” said Aksoy, the Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman. “Peace and stability in the region can be establishe­d with sincere and genuine dialogue, not through alliances of evil.”

Also: KUWAIT CITY:

Turkey is poised to set up coronaviru­s testing centers at the airports of tourist areas as of next June in a bid to draw foreign tourists, the minister of culture and tourism said Sunday.

All foreign tourists coming to the airports of Istanbul, Izmir, Bodrum, Antalya and Dalaman will undergo medical examinatio­ns for the virus, Mehmet Ersoy said in an interview to Turkish-speaking CNN channel.

He added that the ministries of tourism and foreign affairs have already started efforts to relaunch flights between Turkey and 70 countries.

The minister noted that Germany could be one of the countries that would send tourists to Turkey in the first phase of reopening tourist resorts in Turkey.

Earlier on Sunday, Turkey reported a hike in both fatalities and infections with the Covid-10, jumping to 3,786 and 138,657 respective­ly.

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