The Turkish and Russian leaders held a phone call on Sunday in which they discussed several key areas of cooperation that increasingly put Turkey at odds with its NATO allies.
A statement from the Turkish presidency said that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin had “addressed the Turkey-Russia relations, particularly in energy as well as grain corridor and regional issues, including the fight against terror.”
According to Erdogan’s office, the Turkish president told the Russian leader that the two sides could expand the grain corridor across the Black Sea to start including further Russian commodities such as fertilizer and agricultural products.
The corridor was set up with the support of Turkey and the UN to allow for the export of foodstuffs from Ukraine that were stuck behind a Russian blockade.
Soaring food prices had been the primary incentive to find a solution. But the export of Russian goods is still hampered by Western sanctions, which Moscow says is against the original agreement.
“The deal is of complex character, which requires the removal of obstacles for the relevant supplies from Russia in order to meet the demands of the countries most in need,” the Kremlin said in a statement on Sunday.
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Although a member of the NATO alliance that has thrown its weight behind defnding Ukraine, Ankara has taken up the role of the mediator between Moscow and Kyiv.
Nevertheless, Erdogan has continued to express “his sincere wish for the termination of the Russia-Ukraine war as soon as possible.”
The two leaders also discussed establishing a base in Turkey for the export of Russian gas in an attempt to make up for its lost European customers.
Erdogan has supported the idea, which Putin proposed in October. Alexey Miller, the head of Russia’s state-run energy company Gazprom, was in Istanbul last week to hold talks.
“The special importance of joint energy projects, primarily in the gas industry, was emphasized,” the Kremlin said after the phone call.
European countries, including Germany, had been Russia’s biggest customers. But the fallout over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine has led to a massive drop in Russia’s exports to the west.
The Turkish president also called on Putin to support his planned 30-kilometer (19-mile) “security” corridor along Turkey’s border with Syria, an area populated — and for several years now controlled — by Kurds.
A statement from the president’s office pointed to the 2019 agreement between Russia and Turkey to set up a zone under Syrian and Russian control.
Erdogan’s insistence comes as Turkey renews its shelling of positions of Kurdish militant groups such as the People’s Protection Units (YPG). The Turkish strikes came after a terror attack in Istanbul that Ankara has pinned on Kurdish militants within Turkey.
Threats from Turkey to invade Syria with a ground offensive earlier in the year — for the second time during the conflict there — were rebuffed by Russia and the US, the latter of which has been working with Kurdish groups to fight extremist militants such as the so-called Islamic State (IS).
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ab/fb (dpa, AP, Reuters)
Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/erdogan-and-putin-discuss-grain-corridor-gas-deal-and-syria/a-64062301?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf