EU leaders run out of patience with Erdogan

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German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said that here have been too many ‘provocations, and tensions between Turkey, Cyprus and Greece have prevented any direct talks. (AFP)
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Updated 08 December 2020
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EU leaders run out of patience with Erdogan

  • Sanctions over Turkey’s hunt for oil in Greek waters in eastern Med

ANKARA: European leaders have run out of patience with Recep Tayyip Erdogan and are ready to impose sanctions on Turkey at the end of this week.
The Turkish president has angered the EU with what the bloc called a “cat and mouse” game over oil exploration in Greek waters, with Erdogan recalling the survey vessel Oruc Reis to port before EU meetings then redeploying it when the meetings are over.
EU foreign ministers met on Monday and said enough was enough. “There are limits even to German patience,” one diplomat said.
“It was made clear that there should be a response to Turkey,” Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias said, because it had “continued its delinquent behavior.”
The exact nature of the sanctions will be decided at an EU leaders’ summit on Dec. 10-11. They are expected to target areas of Turkey’s economy linked to hydrocarbon exploration, although France and the European Parliament are leading calls for wider and tougher measures.

It was made clear that there should be a response to Turkey because it has continued its delinquent behavior.

Nikos Dendias Foreign minister of Greece

Tensions flared in August when Erdogan sent the Oruc Reis to map out energy-drilling prospects in Greek waters. Germany had hoped to mediate between Athens and Ankara, but was angered when Turkey resumed its gas exploration off Cyprus in October after a brief pause.
“There have been too many provocations,” German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Monday.
Turkish officials said Greece was “the spoiled child of Europe” and Turkey would not be intimidated. “These decisions, sanctions or whatever else, will not contribute to the solution of issues,” Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said.
Erdogan called for talks. “We believe we can solve the problems of the eastern Mediterranean by not excluding each other, but by bringing all the actors together around the same table,” he said.
Charles Ellinas, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, told Arab News the sanctions “will be a clear sign of the EU’s loss of patience and hardened attitudes resulting from Erdogan’s continuing aggression and unwillingness to pull back and negotiate.”
Ellinas said: “On the one hand he calls for negotiations but on the other he continues with threats and aggressive actions. Pulling Oruc Reis back just before the summit is not going to work this time.
“If nothing changes, Erdogan is likely to be facing even stronger measures next year, through the combined weight of the EU and the new US administration.”

 


Election of new Iraqi president delayed by Kurds

Updated 10 sec ago
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Election of new Iraqi president delayed by Kurds

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s parliament postponed the election of a president on Tuesday to allow Kurdish rivals time to agree on a candidate.
Parliamentary Speaker Haibat Al-Halbussi received requests from Iraq's two main Kurdish parties, the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, to postpone the vote to allow both parties more time to reach a deal.
By convention, a Shi’ite holds the powerful post of prime minister, the parliamentary Speaker is a Sunni and the largely ceremonial presidency goes to a Kurd.
Under a tacit agreement between the two main Kurdish parties, a PUK member holds the Iraqi presidency, while the president and regional premier of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region is selected from the KDP. But this time the KDP has named Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein as its own candidate for the presidency.
Once elected, the president will then have 15 days to appoint a prime minister, widely expected to be Nouri Al-Maliki, who held the post from 2006 to 2014. The shrewd 75-year-old politician is Iraq’s only two-term premier since the 2003 US-led invasion.
The Coordination Framework, an alliance of Shi’ite parties that holds a parliamentary majority, has already endorsed Maliki.