Turkey calls on EU to act with common sense, says wants to improve ties
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[December 08, 2020]
ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey urged the
European Union on Tuesday to use "common sense" to end a dispute over
natural gas that has fanned territorial rows in the eastern
Mediterranean and drawn a threat of sanctions from the bloc's leaders.
Speaking at a news conference with his Hungarian counterpart in Ankara,
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu reiterated that Ankara wanted
to join the bloc as a full member, and said EU statements accusing
Ankara of stoking tensions were wrong.
EU member Greece had continued "provocative" steps despite Turkey's
diplomatic efforts, he said.
On Monday, EU foreign ministers said Turkey had failed to help end the
row with EU members Greece and Cyprus over natural gas resources, but
they left any decision on retaliatory sanctions for an EU summit on
Thursday.
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"They need to be fair and honest here. If they also think strategically
and with common sense, not just at the summit but always, and we achieve
a positive atmosphere, we can improve our ties," Cavusoglu said. "We can
only solve our problems with dialogue and diplomacy."
"We want to improve our ties with the EU. We are not saying this because
there is a summit or because there are sanctions and other things on the
agenda," he added. "We always wanted to improve our ties on the basis of
full membership."
NATO member and EU candidate Turkey has been at odds with Greece and
Cyprus over the extent of their continental shelves in the eastern
Mediterranean and rights to offshore hydrocarbon resources.
Tensions flared in August when Turkey sent its Oruc Reis survey vessel
to waters claimed by Greece.
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Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu speaks during a news
conference in Ankara, Turkey December 8, 2020. Turkish Foreign
Ministry/Handout via REUTERS
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After withdrawing Oruc Reis for what it said was maintenance ahead
of a previous EU summit in October, Ankara sent it back shortly
after, citing unsatisfactory results from the summit. It withdrew
the vessel again last week, a move welcomed by NATO and the EU.
European Council President Charles Michel warned Turkey not to play
"cat and mouse" by withdrawing ships before EU summits, only to
redeploy them afterwards. Ankara has said the vessel's returns were
opportunities for diplomacy, but that Greece and the EU squandered
them.
The EU's Parliament has called for sanctions against Turkey. France
is leading the push in the bloc to sanction Turkey at the summit,
but President Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday that Turkey would not
"bow down to threats and blackmail" while repeating a call for
dialogue.
(Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu and Ece Toksabay; Editing by Daren
Butler, William Maclean)
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