Houston Chronicle

Turkey’s deal with Libya upsets neighbors

- By Selcan Hacaoglu and Firat Kozok

Turkey and Libya officially approved a contentiou­s maritime deal that may fuel an energy showdown in the gas-rich waters of the eastern Mediterran­ean, where both countries are at odds with Greece.

The Nov. 27 preliminar­y agreement demarcates a 21mile line that will form the maritime boundary separating what will be the two countries’ respective exclusive economic zones. Libya’s presidenti­al council and Turkey’s parliament approved the memorandum of understand­ing, the Anadolu Agency said Friday. It is now expected to be filed with the U.N.

“This agreement also amounts to a political message that Turkey can’t be sidelined in the eastern Mediterran­ean and nothing can be really achieved in the region without Turkey’s participat­ion,” Cagatay Erciyes, a senior foreign ministry official in charge of maritime and aviation boundary affairs, said Thursday.

Greece, Cyprus and

Egypt see the deal as a brazen Turkish bid for dominance in the contested waters. Libya is also in conflict with Greece over offshore exploratio­n licenses Athens issued for waters south of Crete, which is located between Turkey and Libya. Turkey, which has dispatched warships to accompany its drilling ships off the divided island of Cyprus, will issue more permits for the Mediterran­ean following the deal with Libya, Energy Minister Fatih Donmez said Wednesday.

“Erdogan’s strategy has been to intensify tensions to such an extent as to force serious concession­s from

Greek Cyprus during future negotiatio­ns on the status of the island and how its natural gas wealth will be distribute­d,” said Anthony Skinner, Middle East and North Africa director at risk analyst Verisk Maplecroft, referring to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. “Standing up strongly for Turkish Cypriots constitute­s part of Erdogan’s nationalis­t credential­s but also forms a key part of Turkey’s political identity and will remain a priority national interest.”

Greece said the agreement violated continenta­l shelf and economic exclusive zones of its own islands, including Crete. But Erciyes said Greek islands were “lying on the wrong side of the median line between mainlands,” arguing that the islands’ minimal coastal lengths compared with Turkey’s mainland should not generate continenta­l shelf or economic exclusive zones. Erciyes shared a map of Turkey’s claimed exclusive economic zone, including reference points to the latest agreement with Libya marked as “E” and “F.”

The eastern Mediterran­ean has become a gas hot spot with big finds for Cyprus, Israel and Egypt in recent years. Turkey, which captured northern Cyprus in the wake of a 1974 coup aimed at uniting the island with Greece, opposes the Cypriot drilling without an agreement on sharing any proceeds with Turkish Cypriots. Egypt, whose relations worsened with Turkey after its elected Islamist president, Mohamed Morsi, was overthrown in 2013, also denounced the deal with Libya.

The Turkish drilling ships Fatih and Yavuz are operating off divided Cyprus in waters declared by

Turkey as its own economic exclusive zone and under agreements with the northern Turkish Cypriot state, which is recognized only by Turkey. The European Union has said it is weighing sanctions against Turkey over its oil and natural gas exploratio­n off Cyprus, and Cyprus wants the Internatio­nal Court of Justice to resolve its dispute with Turkey.

Erdogan ruled out any concession­s on the deal with Libya. “As long as the legitimate government in Libya stands firm on its feet, this new step will achieve its goal,” he said Thursday.

Ankara last week also signed a defense agreement aimed at strengthen­ing forces controlled by Libyan Prime Minister Fayez alSarraj’s government in Tripoli, with the capital under attack from easternbas­ed strongman Khalifa Haftar.

Turkey’s main opposition party, CHP, backed the agreement, but Haluk Koc, a senior CHP lawmaker, said Turkey was taking a political risk because of the “fragile” situation of Sarraj in Libya.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Libyan leader Fayez al-Sarraj, left, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reached a deal on a maritime boundary line in the Mediterran­ean Sea.
Associated Press Libyan leader Fayez al-Sarraj, left, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reached a deal on a maritime boundary line in the Mediterran­ean Sea.

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