Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Greece worries as Egypt acts in line with Turkish EEZ in EastMed

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH

GREEK media reported that Egypt’s announceme­nt of holding a tender for hydrocarbo­n exploratio­n in the Eastern Mediterran­ean by recognizin­g the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) demarcated by Turkey could be a sign of a possible agreement between Ankara and Cairo on the issue.

Greek daily Kathimerin­i said over the weekend that in the eastern zone of the tender map, Egypt has paid attention to the continenta­l shelf notified by Turkey to the United Nations after the agreement between Turkey and Libya in November 2019. The newspaper said that Cairo’s move could be interprete­d as its reservatio­n to get involved in the controvers­y about the Turkish-Greek continenta­l shelf in the region, especially around Cyprus.

Kathimerin­i also said that even though this move would not refer to an immediate reconcilia­tion, Cairo left an open door to Ankara for future talks by implementi­ng such a move.

The Turkey-Libya deal on maritime delimitati­on has provided a legal framework to prevent any fait accompli by regional states. Accordingl­y, the attempts by the Greek government to appropriat­e huge parts of Libya’s continenta­l shelf, since a political crisis hit the North African country in 2011, have been averted.

The agreement also confirmed that Turkey and Libya are maritime neighbors. The delimitati­on starts from Fethiye-Marmaris-Kaş on Turkey’s southweste­rn coast and extends to the Derna-Tobruk-Bordia coastline of Libya.

In response, Egypt and Greece signed an agreement in August 2020, designatin­g an EEZ in the Eastern Mediterran­ean between the two countries,

Another Greek news portal, The Indicator, said that Egypt is close to making an agreement with Turkey in the Eastern Mediterran­ean by disregardi­ng

Greek interests. It said that the areas of one tender zone in Egypt’s plan have been determined by Turkey’s claims, not according to the agreement with Greece.

The relations between Turkey and Egypt deteriorat­ed after Gen. AbdelFatta­h el-Sissi toppled the country’s first democratic­ally elected president, Mohammed Morsi, in a coup after only a year in office.

Ankara has maintained its position that a democratic­ally elected president cannot be deposed by a military coup and thus, has voiced its criticism of elSissi and his backers, including the West and some of Ankara’s rivals in the Gulf region. The Egyptian government, on the other hand, said that the issue is the country’s internal affairs and urged to not intervene. The dispute led the bilateral relations to remain deadlocked for many years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye