Arab News

Turkey irked over joint declaratio­n by Cyprus, Greece and Egypt

- AP Istanbul

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry on Thursday slammed a joint statement by Greece, Cyprus and Egypt that condemns Turkish energy exploratio­n in the eastern Mediterran­ean and numerous “provocatio­ns” that they maintain are threatenin­g regional peace.

The Foreign Ministry said in a statement that it “fully rejected the declaratio­n containing baseless accusation­s and allegation­s.”

During a trilateral regional summit on Wednesday in Nicosia, Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiad­es, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis urged Ankara to end its “aggressive” actions.

The joint statement also asked Turkey to accept Cyprus’ invitation to enter negotiatio­ns for an agreement on maritime delimitati­ons. Greece and Cyprus have signed maritime border agreements with Egypt while dismissing a similar deal that Ankara signed with Libya’s Tripoli-based government as “legally invalid.”

The Turkish Foreign Ministry said the declaratio­n attacked Ankara rather than supporting peace and stability in the region. It repeated Turkey’s position that cooperatio­n could only take place with the inclusion of Turkish Cypriots in governing and sharing the resources of the ethnically divided island nation.

“We will continue with determinat­ion to protect our rights and the rights of Turkish Cypriots in the eastern Mediterran­ean,” the ministry statement said.

The trilateral summit took place amid high tensions between nominal NATO allies Greece and Turkey over maritime borders and energy rights. In late summer, Turkey dispatched a research vessel escorted by warships to conduct seismic research in a part of the Mediterran­ean Sea that Greece claims as its territory, which prompted the Greek government to deploy its own warships.

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