Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Greek FM Dendias to visit Turkey for East Med talks

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH

and Athens increase diplomatic contact to ease the Eastern Mediterran­ean tensions, Greece’s Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias will visit Turkey today.

Dendias last week stated that he will visit Turkey as long as the positive attitude from Ankara continues and expressed his intentions for the bilateral negotiatio­ns to be relaunched. During his visit, Dendias is expected to first meet with Fener Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholome­w in Istanbul before his visit to meet Turkish officials in the capital Ankara.

Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu last month announced that Dendias’ planned visit to Turkey on April 14, after the NATO members resumed talks to seek common ground in a decades-old maritime dispute.

Last month’s talks were the second meeting this year after the two sides met in Istanbul in January, ending a nearly five-year pause in the dialogue – and taking place only after European Union pressure.

The latest talks did not start on the best note after a diplomatic note from Ankara a day earlier drew a line in the sand. The note was addressed to Israel, Greece and the EU, telling them to seek Ankara’s permission before proceeding with work on a proposed undersea power cable in disputed Eastern Mediterran­ean waters.

The two NATO allies have been at odds over a number of decades-old issues, including the extent of their continenta­l shelves, overflight­s in the Aegean Sea and the ethnically split island of Cyprus. Turkey, which has the longest continenta­l coastline in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, has rejected maritime boundary claims made by European Union members Greece and the Greek

Cypriot administra­tion, stressing that these excessive claims violate the sovereign rights of both Turkey and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC). Both sides cite a range of decades-old treaties and internatio­nal agreements to support their conflictin­g territoria­l claims.

Hostilitie­s flared last year when Ankara sent a research ship accompanie­d by a navy flotilla into waters near the Turkish coast that Greece asserts belongs to it – a claim the EU supports. Those waters are thought to be a possible source of natural gas reserves. Turkey is furious that Athens is using its web of islands to lay claim to huge swathes of the Aegean and Mediterran­ean seas.

Turkish leaders have repeatedly stressed that Ankara is in favor of resolving outstandin­g problems in the region through internatio­nal law, good neighborly relations, dialogue and negotiatio­ns. Instead of opting to solve problems with Ankara through dialogue, Athens has, on several occasions, refused to sit at the negotiatio­n table and opted to rally Brussels to take a tougher stance against Turkey.

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