Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Ankara calls on world to back ‘righteous’ Baku in occupied Karabakh

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>> TURKEY yesterday called on the internatio­nal community to support Azerbaijan, the “righteous” party in the conflict in occupied Nagorno-Karabakh. “The world must side with the right one in the Nagorno-Karabakh tension, and the right one is Azerbaijan,” Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said during a working visit to Azerbaijan where he met with the country’s leader Ilham Aliyev as well as his Azerbaijan­i counterpar­t Ceyhun Bayramov.

>> THE TURKISH Foreign Ministry yesterday criticized a decision by Canada to suspend military exports permits to Turkey over the ongoing conflict in Armenian-occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, saying that it amounts to double standards.

In a statement, the ministry said Canada’s decision is an indicator of its double standards toward Azerbaijan’s rightful struggle to liberate its lands from Armenian occupation for the past three decades as the country continues to export arms to countries militarily involved in the Yemen conflict, even though it has come under criticism by the United Nations for doing so.

“While Canada does not see the harm in exporting arms to countries militarily involved in the Yemen crisis ... and presents the sales as a contributi­on to regional security, there cannot be any other explanatio­n for its prevention of arms exports to its NATO ally,” it said.

The ministry further criticized Canada’s uncooperat­ive stance toward Turkey’s Operation Peace Spring in northern Syria.

Turkey has a comprehens­ive export control regime and meticulous­ly carries out its duties in line with the aforementi­oned regimes, the statement read, adding that Turkey expects Canada to avoid adopting a hypocritic­al policy and act without the influence and political calculatio­ns of anti-Turkey circles in the country.

Later in the day, Defense Industries Presidency (SSB) Chairperso­n İsmail Demir said in a Twitter message that Turkey’s defense industry keeps improving despite efforts to block it and embargo decisions. He shared photos from leading Turkish defense firm ASELSAN’s latest efforts to develop advanced-technology defense industry products.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne announced Monday that his country suspended export permits to Turkey to further assess the situation.

“In line with ‘s robust export control regime and the ongoing investigat­ion, I have suspended the relevant export permits to #Turkey,” he expressed.

“Canada continues to be concerned by the ongoing conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting in shelling of communitie­s and civilian casualties,” Champagne said.

He ordered an investigat­ion of reports claiming that Canadian imaging and targeting systems on unmanned drones were being used by Azerbaijan in clashes with Armenia.

In 2019, Canada had announced that it had frozen the issuing of export permits for military shipments to Turkey after the country’s counterter­rorism operation in northern Syria. The decision was reversed in May.

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