Egyptian FM in Greece for talks on border tensions with Turkey

Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry on Tuesday
arrived in the Greek capital Athens for an official visit amid heightened
tensions over Turkish maritime border claims in the Eastern Mediterranean.
The ongoing territorial dispute was expected to be
among the top regional and international issues up for discussion during
several days of talks aimed at further strengthening cooperation and
coordination between the two countries.
As well as meeting with the Greek president, prime
minister, and his ministerial counterpart, Shoukry was also due to take part in
the 24th annual roundtable conference, organized by The Economist group, at
which European and Eastern Mediterranean matters would be on the agenda.
Cairo and Athens recently signed an agreement to
demarcate maritime borders, a move strongly criticized by Turkey which has been
conducting energy exploration operations in the Eastern Mediterranean in the
face of Greek protests.
Last year, Turkey angered Egypt and Greece by
signing a security and military accord setting out new maritime boundaries and
authorizing Ankara to intervene militarily in Libya, which Cairo considered a
threat to its national security and the stability of the region as a whole.
Greece and Egypt have continued to condemn Turkey’s
violations in Mediterranean waters where Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
has been pursuing an expansionary policy which has placed the Greeks on the
front line.
“Turkey is the only country that opens war fronts
everywhere, and it is the only country that threatens its neighboring countries
with war if they choose to exercise their legal rights. It blatantly violates
the UN Charter,” said Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias.
On Sunday, Shoukry said that his country was waiting
for actions from Turkey, not words, in response to statements made by Yasin
Aktay, an adviser to Erdogan, about the importance of rapprochement between
Cairo and Ankara.
“If Turkey’s statements do not coincide with its
actions, they are irrelevant ... Ankara’s expansionist policy destabilizes the
region,” Shoukry added.
The minister pointed out that Turkish military
presence in Libya and Iraq, and its behavior in the Eastern Mediterranean,
threatened regional stability and was not conducive to dialogue and
understanding.