Directions to Orthodoxy     Directions to Orthodoxy
Greek leader makes historic trip to Turkey
Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis(R) and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan shake hands in Ankara.
Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis(R) and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan shake hands in Ankara.
This post has been viewed 454 times.

Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis(R) and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan shake hands in Ankara. Turkey and Greece pledged Wednesday to build on a spectacular thaw in their once-stormy bilateral ties, but at the same time they exposed their differences on how to resolve long-standing contentious issues such as the status of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and  sovereignty in the Aegean Sea.
References:
· Greek Archbishop's health worsens, treated at home
· Bartholomew celebrates the rite of the blessing of the waters in the Golden Horn
· Archbishop Demetrios Part of Delegation to European Court
· Orthodox Church's influence in Greek politics
· Turkey Bars Meeting of Orthodox Leaders
· The Supreme Court in Strasburg allows Patriarchs’ appeal for Buyukada orphanage
· Ankara cancels Istanbul visit by archbishop of Cyprus
· Plot against the ecumenical Patriarch foiled
· Charges against Bartholomew I for calling himself Ecumenical Patriarch

Printable Version
Email to a Friend
RSS Syndication
Greek leader makes historic trip to Turkey
Posted on Wed Jan 23 2008

International Herald Tribune

ISTANBUL: In an effort to overcome decades of mutual distrust, Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis arrived Wednesday in Turkey, the first official visit by a Greek leader in almost half a century.

The three-day visit, which began in Ankara, Turkey's capital, was significant more for the fact that it happened than for any bilateral agreements it was expected to produce. It had been rescheduled three times since 2004.

The last Greek prime minister to visit Turkey was Karamanlis's uncle Constantine Karamanlis, in May 1959.

Strains in the relations were nowhere to be seen in Ankara on Wednesday, as Karamanlis walked down a red carpet with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey as a marching band played the Greek national anthem.

The leaders met for more than two hours, and afterward held a news conference that was broadcast on national television in Turkey. The tone, for both leaders, was cordial.

"I believe 2008 will offer new opportunities for our countries to improve bilateral relations," Erdogan said. "I'd like to see the period ahead of us as a window of opportunity."

Historically, relations between the two countries have been fraught. They have fought four wars since Greece won its independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1832.

More recently, they clashed when Turkey invaded the island of Cyprus in 1974, a dispute that is still unresolved and is one of the main obstacles to Turkey's accession to the European Union. In 1996, they nearly went to war over a tiny set of uninhabited islets in the Aegean Sea.

Erdogan said that Turkey, which refuses to pull its troops out of Cyprus, hoped to return to the negotiating table after elections on the island in February.

"We expect the support of my dear friend, my counterpart, Kostas," Erdogan said. "That is a step for the restart of talks."

He added: "Our goal, doubtlessly, is to resolve this issue at the negotiating table."

Relations have improved dramatically since the late 1990s, when coping with the aftermath of earthquakes in both countries drew them together. Now, diplomatic and military experts from both sides of the Aegean hold regular talks. A hotline between their air forces and armies has been set up, trade relations have boomed, and in November the two nations inaugurated a gas pipeline linking the Caspian Sea to Greece. Athens also backs Turkey's bid to join the EU.

But the rapprochement that has taken shape over the past decade has failed to resolve a string of problems. Turkey refuses to recognize Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, head of the Eastern Orthodox Church, as a religious leader of global standing. To do so, it says, would encourage separatism among religious minorities.

Karamanlis, apparently in an effort to support the church, said at the news conference that its presence in Turkey was valuable to the government. Karamanlis is scheduled to visit the patriarch in Istanbul on Thursday.

"It is an important criteria for Turkey that the center of the patriarchate is here," Karamanlis said. "I would even call it a European passport."

Attacks on Christians in Turkey have been increasing as a rising wave of nationalism sweeps the country.

Contact: - Search - Log On Copyright © 2008, Directions to Orthodoxy This site is powered by ThisChurch.org