EU Parliament urges Turkey to withdraw vessels off Cyprus

European Parliament resolution calls on Ankara to pull out ships exploring hydrocarbon reserves amid dispute with Greek Cypriot Administration

EU Parliament urges Turkey to withdraw vessels off Cyprus
The European Parliament has called on Turkey to "immediately withdraw" its vessels off of Cyprus and called on Ankara and the Greek Cypriot Administration to resume talks over the divided island "as quickly as possible".

The call came on Thursday in a resolution agreed by the European Parliament Plenary in Brussels amid an on-going dispute between the two sides over oil and gas exploration in the island’s waters.

The resolution stated the EP ''demands Turkish vessels operating in waters in and around the EEZ [so-called Exclusive Economics Zone] of Cyprus be withdrawn immediately".

The European Parliament also expressed "serious concerns" at the latest renewed tensions between the Greek Cypriot Administration and Turkey and called on both sides to ''show maximum restraint in seeking to resolve current differences".

The EU Parliament said Turkey remained a strategic ally in its southern neighborhood and urged ''both sides to resume talks aimed at finding a lasting, peaceful solution as quickly as possible''.

- Settlement urged

Johannes Hahn, Commissioner for European Neighborhood Policy and Enlargement Negotiations, urged both parties to launch comprehensive negotiations rapidly.

''A settlement would open up the fullest range of options for exploiting hydrocarbon resources, in the most economically advantageous way, and for the benefit of all Cypriots,'' he said. 

The Greek Cypriot Administration maintains the Turkish hydrocarbon exploration ship Barbaros Hayrettin entered its so-called Exclusive Economic Zone early last month and intended to stay in the area under a maritime order issued by Turkey. 

Turkey’s Chief EU negotiator Volkan Bozkir told reporters in Brussels on Wednesday: ''The Greek Cypriot Administration controls only half of the island. That it should possess all of the island’s resources will not be accepted by the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.

''The Cyprus problem is also interfering with Turkey's admission to the European Union. Turkey will also respond in a much stronger way to this, by refuting these misperceptions, by revealing the truth."

- Talks suspended

And Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters last month: “We have the right to conduct seismic studies there, according to agreements signed between Turkey and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus [KKTC]. We will always use this right."

A dispute between Turkey and the Greek Cypriot Administration over the divided island of Cyprus on December 11, 2006 prompted the EU to freeze eight chapters of Turkey's accession process into the 28-nation bloc. 

The Greek Cypriot administration suspended the most recent talks over the island's future on October 7 after Turkey sent the Barbaros Hayrettin - a seismic vessel -  to monitor an oil-and-gas exploration mission off the Cyprus coast.

The Greek Cypriot Administration is a member of the EU and is internationally recognized by all nations except Turkey.

Anadolu Agency
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