| November
11, 2004, Ekhatimerini: As Foreign Minister Petros Molyviatis clashed
with the opposition in Parliament over Greek policy toward Ankara, his
Turkish counterpart indicated that he had no intention of recognizing
the Republic of Cyprus ahead of Turkey's bid to join the European Union.
Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul was quoted yesterday by the Athens
News Agency as telling Turkey's National Assembly late on Tuesday that
«Turkey has no obligation to recognize the Greek-Cypriot administration.»
Turkey, the only country to recognize Turkish-occupied northern Cyprus
as a legitimate state, refuses to deal with the government in Nicosia,
despite the fact that, since May 1, Cyprus is part of the 25-strong EU
that Turkey hopes, eventually, to join.
Gul also accused the Greek air force of harassing Turkish jets in the
Aegean, a charge that Greece - which regularly complains of Turkish military
violations of Greece's air space - denied.
In Athens, during a briefing of the Parliamentary Committee on Foreign
Policy and Defense, Molyviatis clashed with MPs from the PASOK main opposition
party over the precise content of an EU clause on differences Greece and
Turkey must solve before the end of the year or otherwise refer to the
International Court of Justice for arbitration. The dispute overshadowed
the issue of US recognition, last week, of the Former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia as the «Republic of Macedonia» - a move which
upset Athens.
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