Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Compromise only way to end East Med dispute

A win-win solution for the tension between Turkey and Greece depends on Athens agreeing to improve political and diplomatic dialogue, President Erdoğan said as he called on Greece not to ignore Turkish rights and to stop false claims

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PRESIDENT Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said a win-win solution for the ongoing crisis with Greece over the Eastern Mediterran­ean is possible through dialogue as overlappin­g maritime claims have caused tensions to increase. Speaking at the Extended Provincial Heads Meeting of the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) in Ankara, the president touched upon the tension with Greece and France over the Eastern Mediterran­ean. Erdoğan said the Greek Cypriot administra­tion and Greece are increasing tensions in the region by ignoring the rights of Turkey and Turkish Cypriots.

He also called on the European Union to pull its weight in the face of Greece’s actions. “Greece’s stance in the Aegean and the Mediterran­ean is malevolent,” he said, criticizin­g Athens’ claims of maritime jurisdicti­on via its island of Kastellori­zo (Megisti-Meis), one of the smallest Greek islands in the Aegean Sea and only 2 kilometers (1.25 miles) from the Turkish coast, saying that the case for a zone of 40,000 square kilometers (11,662 square nautical miles) via the roughly 10-square-kilometer (3.8-square-mile) island was “ridiculous and unfounded.”

He noted that Turkey’s actions in the Eastern Mediterran­ean are fully in line with internatio­nal law. “Turkey has done nothing but legitimate actions in coordinati­on with the memorandum signed with Libya in the Eastern Mediterran­ean,” he said, adding that while Turkey does not intend to violate any country’s rights in the region, it will also not allow others to infringe on its own rights.

As part of the country’s hydrocarbo­n surveying activities, Turkey issued a navigation­al telex (Navtex) on Aug. 10, announcing that its vessel Oruç Reis would begin conducting fresh seismic research in the Eastern Mediterran­ean.

TURKEY’S decision came following a controvers­ial delimitati­on deal signed between Greece and Egypt, only a day after Turkey said it would postpone its activities in the region as a sign of goodwill after mediation efforts from Germany.

But, after declaring the treaty “null and void” and pointing out that the deal usurped and ignored the rights and continenta­l shelves of both Ankara and Tripoli, Turkey authorized the Oruç Reis to continue its activities in an area within Turkey’s continenta­l shelf.

The ship will continue seismic activities in the Eastern Mediterran­ean along with the vessels Cengiz Han and Ataman until Aug. 23.

Turkey’s decision to announce new exploratio­n in the Eastern Mediterran­ean raised alarms in Greece on Monday as Athens responded with its own notice, placing its navy on alert. Greece continues to turn a deaf ear to Turkey’s calls for constructi­ve dialogue to reach a peaceful solution as Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias on Tuesday after a press conference with the president called on Turkey “to leave the Greek continenta­l shelf immediatel­y.” He said Athens had requested an emergency meeting of the EU Foreign Affairs Council to discuss the issue.

Erdoğan also discussed developmen­ts in Eastern Mediterran­ean, regional issues with German Chancellor Merkel in a phone call later yesterday, underlinin­g that Turkey desires problems in the region should be solved within principles of dialogue, justice and internatio­nal law.

TRNC IN LINE WITH TURKEY

The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) acts in accordance with Turkey in defending its rights in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, the country’s prime minister said yesterday.

“The philosophy of the TRNC is to act in line with Turkey 100% in defending our rights in the Eastern Mediterran­ean,” Ersin Tatar told Anadolu Agency (AA), adding that the TRNC and Turkey are seeking their rights in the Eastern Mediterran­ean but will not tolerate unfairness in the region.

“As the TRNC, we have a voice in the Blue Homeland, and we are in cooperatio­n with Turkey to defend our rights and interests,” Tatar said.

He added that Turkey resolutely continues its activities with its armed forces and the navy in the region. On the deal signed between Greece and Egypt, he said it violated the rights and interests of the TRNC and Turkey.

Turkey has consistent­ly contested the Greek Cypriot administra­tion’s unilateral drilling in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, asserting that the TRNC also has rights to the resources in the area.

FRANCE REINFORCES MILITARY

Erdoğan continued to criticize French President Emmanuel Macron for his stance against Turkey.

“Macron and others like him only want to bring the colonial period back through their actions in the region. This is far from what Turkey’s aims are,” he said.France said yesterday it was “temporaril­y reinforcin­g” its military presence in the Eastern Mediterran­ean amid tensions.

“The situation in the Eastern Mediterran­ean is worrying. Turkey’s unilateral decisions on oil exploratio­n are causing tensions,” Macron tweeted late Wednesday while the French military said two Rafale jets were expected to arrive yesterday on the island of Crete for a stay of “several days,” after having taken part in a military exercise in Cyprus earlier in the week.

The assault helicopter carrier Tonnerre (Thunder), en route to deliver aid to Beirut after last week’s deadly port explosion there, was joined overnight by the La Fayette frigate, previously deployed to Cyprus, and they took part in an exercise with the Greek navy.

“The purpose of this military presence is to strengthen the autonomous assessment of the situation and to affirm France’s commitment to free movement, to the security of maritime navigation in the Mediterran­ean and respect for internatio­nal law,” said a ministry statement.

Following France’s statements, Greek Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, thanked France yesterday in a tweet saying that Paris is “a true friend of Greece and also a fervent protector of European values and internatio­nal law.”

Ties between NATO allies France and Turkey have soured in recent months, notably when the French leader said the lack of NATO response to a unilateral Turkish operation in northern Syria to protect its national borders showed the alliance was undergoing “brain death.” The Libyan civil war as well as drilling in the Eastern Mediterran­ean added to the animosity aggravated in June after an incident between Turkish and French warships over an attempt to inspect a vessel suspected of smuggling weapons to Libya.

Since the discovery of significan­t gas reserves in the region a decade ago, countries have been engaged in renewed disputes over maritime borders, while internatio­nal law also presents few remedies. The deepening rift between the two countries surfaced with Turkey’s decision to enhance energy exploratio­n activities in the Eastern Mediterran­ean and the deal Ankara made with Libya’s official government. Turkey and Libya on Nov. 27, 2019, signed two separate pacts – one on military cooperatio­n and the other on maritime boundaries of countries in the Eastern Mediterran­ean. The maritime pact asserted Turkey’s rights in the Eastern Mediterran­ean in the face of unilateral drilling by the Greek Cypriot administra­tion, clarifying that the TRNC also had rights to the resources in the area. The pact took effect on Dec. 8.

Within this scope, Ankara has sent drilling vessels to the Eastern Mediterran­ean since last year, a move opposed by Athens and the Greek Cypriot administra­tion, which have threatened to arrest the ships’ crews and enlist EU leaders to join their criticism. Ankara has on every occasion vowed it wants to see energy as an incentive for a political resolution on the island and peace in the wider Mediterran­ean basin, not a catalyst for further tensions.

 ??  ?? Turkish seismic research vessel Oruç Reis travels to the west of Turkey’s southern Antalya province on the Eastern Mediterran­ean, Aug. 12, 2020.
Turkish seismic research vessel Oruç Reis travels to the west of Turkey’s southern Antalya province on the Eastern Mediterran­ean, Aug. 12, 2020.

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