Search
Close this search box.
GBC
GHANA WEATHER

EU sanctions Turkey for drilling off the coast of Cyprus

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
Pinterest

The European Union will reduce its financial assistance to Turkey and halt high-level talks with the country as part of a set of sanctions over oil and gas drilling off the coast of Cyprus.

EU foreign ministers who met in Brussels on Monday decided to reduce the pre-accession assistance to Turkey for 2020 by €145.8 million. They also suspended negotiations on an aviation agreement and halted high-level bilateral talks between the two countries.

Finally, they invited the European Investment Bank — the EU’s not-for-profit lending institution — to review its lending activities in Turkey, which totalled €358.8 million last year.

The Council once again called on Turkey to refrain from any drilling activities off the coast of Cyprus and instead, “act in a spirit of good neighbourliness and respect the sovereignty and sovereign rights of Cyprus in accordance with international law.”

It also said that “it remains seized of the matter” and that the bloc’s top diplomat and the EU Commission will “continue to work on options for targeted measures.”

READ MORE: Turkey-Cyprus dispute: Why are the two countries arguing over drilling rights?

Turkey sent a first drilling ship off the coast of Cyprus — which is divided in a Greek-speaking and a Turkish-speaking parts — two months ago.

The EU condemned the move as “illegal” but Ankara says the exploration is legal because it is in the territorial waters of Northern Cyprus. Turkey is the only country to recognise the territory as such and inflamed tensions by sending a second drilling ship, which arrived in the area last week.

In a statement issued on Tuesday, Turkey’s foreign ministries said the EU sanctions “will in no way affect Turkey’s determination to continue its hydrocarbon activities in the Eastern Mediterranean.”

“These conclusions demonstrate how prejudiced and biased the EU is with regard to Cyprus as they make no reference to the Turkish Cypriots, who have equal rights over the natural resources of the Island, in total disregard of their existence in Cyprus,” it added.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT