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INTERNATIONAL > Turkey will not adopt a policy based on rumors toward Greece: PM Erdoğan

ATHENS – Anatolia News Agency

Greece's state-owned television station ERT will air on March 4 an interview with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. AA photo

Greece's state-owned television station ERT will air on March 4 an interview with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. AA photo

Turkey does not want to adopt a policy based on rumors regarding its relations with Greece, Turkey’s prime minister told Greek journalists on March 3. 

“While we consider the partnership between the two countries as strategic, we want to add a different dimension to this partnership,” Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was quoted as saying on the state-owned television station ERT in the fragments of an interview that is to be published on March 4 prior to his meeting with Greek counterpart Antonis Samaras in Istanbul.

Erdoğan said the delegations were set to discuss a number of issues, such as tourism, energy, telecommunications and defense, while also signing new agreements in several of these areas. 

“We had found the opportunity to talk about many of these issues with Samaras in our short meeting in Doha [on Jan. 29]. We will make new steps in the matters previously discussed. I presume that everything will work out all right,” he said. 

One of the topics on the agenda of Erdoğan and Samaras’ 40-minute summit in Doha was a project to build a mosque in Athens. Erdoğan announced that he had offered Turkish help for the building of the house of worship, while adding that Samaras was “warm” to the idea. 

However, a week later on Feb. 7, Greek Deputy Foreign Minister Constantinos Tsiaras told deputies in Parliament that the building would be built entirely using the country’s own financial resources and that the project was not a specific topic on the agenda of Greek-Turkish relations. 

The surprise meeting in Doha also came amid renewed debate about the reopening of Istanbul’s Halki Greek Orthodox seminary.  

In the fragments of ERT’s interview, Erdoğan also emphasized that the trade volume between the two countries reached $5 billion in 2012. 

“$3.5 billion is the amount of Greece’s exports and $1.5 billion is the amount of Turkey’s exports. We are moving forward, protecting the due rights of the neighbors and with solidarity,” he said, adding that he expected tomorrow’s meeting to be a crucial one for boosting cooperation among both countries.   

March/03/2013

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constantinos kio

3/4/2013 8:00:28 PM

greece have more than 320 mosques . wonder how many churches working in turkey , also if they are easy to build a new one in Ankara or somewhere else

mara mcglothin

3/4/2013 5:40:18 PM

Why doesn't anyone speak more about the lack of churches in the ME? Perhaps it is because there aren't enough people to justify/finance the building?

Murat

3/4/2013 4:43:38 PM

Mosques and Churches are the least of the problems. But Athens being the only European capital without a mosque, where there were over 100 of them, tells a story.

Manolis Xenopoulos

3/4/2013 2:46:13 PM

Chalki and the mosque should be the cherry, not the cake. The Aegean, reciprocity in minority rights, adherence to international treaties and Cyprus are the issues. If these are solved, all else will fall into place and the scope for mutually beneficial relations wider than anyone can imagine. The prerequisite to wipe the slate clean : an honest appraisal and acceptance of each side’s past mistakes and injuries committed. Don’t see it happening anytime soon, stalemate to continue.

Pawel Bury

3/4/2013 12:19:29 PM

@ilker, as long as you believe that your most serious problem is a mosque in another country, you'll never be able to identify your real problems. Nothing will change in Turkey when Greece builds up this mosque. Nothing will change in Turkey neither in terms of religion freedom, or press freedom, or human rights. Wake up. Regards.

Vangelis Denaxas

3/4/2013 11:51:58 AM

Ilker avni "only country in Europe with out a Mosque in any of its cities"...Are you sure? Have you been at Western Thrace places, like Komotini?...

steve bruce

3/4/2013 11:48:05 AM

@İlker -What are you talking about? There are over 160 mosques in Greece.

ilker avni

3/4/2013 3:01:33 AM

Greece,s problems has only just started,the rise of the Nazi party in Greece politics will harm any relations,the Nazi party is all ready causeing trouble brtween the two,as for the Mosque in the city of Athens the Nazis will block it.Greece must be the only country in Europe with out a Mosque in any of its cities,that should tell you alot about Greece..
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