Russia and Turkey are ‘close’ but will disagree, Lavrov says

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks at the annual Munich Security Conference in Germany February 15, 2020. (Reuters)
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Updated 15 February 2020
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Russia and Turkey are ‘close’ but will disagree, Lavrov says

  • Turkey purchased the Russian S-400 air defense system despite opposition from NATO ally US
  • Two countries support opposing sides in the ongoing Libyan, Syrian conflicts

MUNICH, Feb 15 : Russia has good ties with Turkey but will sometimes disagree, Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Saturday.

“We have very good relations with Turkey, that does not mean we have to agree on everything. Full agreement on all issues cannot be possible between any two countries,” Lavrov told the Munich Security Council.

Turkey purchased the Russian S-400 air defense system despite opposition from NATO ally US and the threat of sanctions, and despite the fact the two countries support opposing sides in the ongoing Libya conflict.

Meanwhile, Turkey said differences over Syria “shouldn’t affect” relations with Russia.

“The differences of opinion in Syria shouldn’t affect Turkey-Russia relations. The situation in Idlib will not affect the S-400 agreement,” broadcaster NTV reported Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu as saying.

Rebel backer Turkey and Damascus ally Russia have worked closely on Syria although they are on opposite sides of the war.

Cavusoglu met with Lavrov on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference and, in a tweet, described their meeting as “positive.”

Cavusoglu said that a Turkish delegation would go to Moscow on Monday. “(We) agreed on making an evaluation after these meetings,” the Turkish minister added.

A Russian delegation including military and intelligence officials had already held talks in Ankara last weekend, but no concrete agreement emerged.


South Sudan orders UN personnel to leave parts of Jonglei state

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South Sudan orders UN personnel to leave parts of Jonglei state

  • The military said all civilians living in Nyirol, Uror, and Akobo counties in Jonglei were “directed to immediately evacuate for safety to government-controlled areas as soon as possible”

JUBA: South Sudan’s military has ordered all civilians and personnel from the UN mission and all other charities to evacuate three counties in Jonglei state ahead of an operation there against opposition forces.

Clashes that the UN says are occurring at a scale not seen since 2017 have been convulsing South Sudan, Africa’s youngest country, for months.

Some of the fiercest fighting has taken place in Jonglei, located in the country’s east on the border with Ethiopia, where the South Sudan People’s Defense Forces, or SSPDF, is seeking to halt an offensive by fighters loyal to the Sudan ‌People’s Liberation Army-in-Opposition, or SPLA-IO.

An ‌operation code-named “Operation Enduring Peace” was “imminent,” the ‌SSPDF said in ‌a statement.

The military said all civilians living in Nyirol, Uror, and Akobo counties in Jonglei were “directed to immediately evacuate for safety to government-controlled areas as soon as possible.”

All personnel from the UN Mission in South Sudan and those working for nongovernmental organizations were also ordered to evacuate the three counties within 48 hours.

“Our peacekeepers in Akobo remain in place, carrying out all efforts under our mandate to ‌help de-escalate tensions and prevent conflict,” a ‍UNMISS spokesperson said.

She ‍did not say whether UN staff also remained in the ‍other countries.

Last week, SPLA-IO called on its forces to march on South Sudan’s capital, Juba, signalling a major escalation. Earlier this month, SPLA-IO forces seized the town of Pajut in heavy fighting in the north of Jonglei, and the town’s capture was seen as putting the state capital of Bor at risk.

In a statement, UNMISS said 180,000 people in the state had already been displaced by the conflict and urged South Sudan’s leaders “to put the interests of their people first by stopping the fighting.”

Medical charity Medecins Sans Frontières, or MSF, said in a statement on Sunday it had evacuated key staff from Akobo county after “clear instruction from the relevant authorities, and in response to the deteriorating security situation in the area.”

SPLA-IO forces led by South Sudan’s vice president Riek Machar battled the military in the 2013-18 civil war, which was fought along largely ethnic ‌lines and killed about 400,000 people.

A peace deal in 2018 quieted the conflict, although localized clashes have persisted.