Greece Rejects Turkish Minister’s Comments on Muslim Minority
Greece reacted angrily on Sunday to a statement by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu that described members of a Muslim minority in northern Greece as Turkish and that said they were not accorded full civic rights.
The statement by Cavusoglu, during a private
visit to the northern Greek region of Thrace on Sunday, came ahead of his
official meetings on Monday with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and
Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias in Athens.
The two foreign ministers clashed openly last
month at a news conference in Ankara following a meeting aimed at easing months
of tension between the two historic rivals, Reuters reported.
“We want
Greece to give the same rights as we provide to the Greek Orthodox Church and
Greek minority to the Turks in Western Thrace,” Cavusoglu said according to a
video provided by the Turkish Foreign Ministry.
A century after the two countries fought a war
that displaced more than a million people on both sides of the border, Turkey
says the roughly 120,000-strong Muslim community in the region is a Turkish
minority, a position rejected by Athens, which describes them as Greek Muslims.
“Turkey’s
continuous efforts to distort reality, as well as its claims alleging lack of
protection of these citizens’ rights or discrimination, are unfounded and are
rejected in their entirety,” Greek Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexandros
Papaioannou said in a news release.
The two countries, both members of the NATO
alliance, are at odds over issues ranging from competing maritime territorial
claims in the eastern Mediterranean to the status of Cyprus and the treatment
of migrant boats.
They came close to armed conflict last year when
naval vessels from each side maneuvered close to each other in disputed waters
during a standoff over energy exploration.
Tensions have eased slightly in recent months
and officials resumed exploratory talks over their disputes earlier this year
following a five-year hiatus.