Khaleej Times

Greek, Turkish warships in brief encounter near disputed islets

- AFP

athens — Greek and Turkish warships were involved on Sunday in a brief faceoff near a group of disputed Greek islets in the Aegean, coinciding with renewed tensions between Athens and Ankara.

The Greek defence ministry said a Turkish navy missile boat, “along with two special forces rafts,” entered Greek territoria­l waters near the Imia islets.

Located just off the Turkish coast and claimed by Ankara, the unhabited rocky specks are an historic flarepoint in a long-running demarcatio­n dispute.

Greek coastguard vessels and a navy gunboat shadowed the Turkish group, notifying them of the violation, and the Turks left the area after about seven minutes, it said.

In Turkey, the local media initially reported that the Turkish

a Turkish navy missile boat, along with two special forces rafts entered Greek waters near the Imia islets Greek coastguard vessels and a navy gunboat shadowed the Turkish group, notifying them of the violation, and the Turks left the area after about seven minutes Greek defence ministry

warship — with Chief of Staff General Hulusi Akar onboard — was blocked by Greece from approachin­g the islets.

The private Dogan news agency reported that there were “tense moments” for half an hour before the Turkish ship returned to the Turkish peninsula of Bodrum.

But Turkish armed forces, quoted by the state-run news agency Anadolu, denied that the ship had been blocked, and said a small Greek coastguard vessel had watched from afar. It added that General Akar was onboard the ship to “review and inspect” Turkish vessels in the Aegean.

The Imia islets — called Kardak in Turkey — lie just seven kilometres from Bodrum.

A row over their sovereignt­y islets flared in January 1996, when the two countries sent marines to two neighbouri­ng islands in a sign of an imminent armed confrontat­ion. They then withdrew their troops after heavy diplomatic pressure by the US. —

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