December 22, 2022
2 mins read

NATO membership for Sweden remains far off: Turkey

On June 28, Turkey, Sweden and Finland reached a trilateral memorandum of understanding (MoU) ahead of the NATO Madrid summit….reports Asian Lite News

Sweden has not taken enough “concrete steps” to extradite people that Ankara sees as terrorists and freeze their assets, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Thursday, as Sweden tries to convince Turkey to ratify its bid to join NATO.

“They deported a PKK (the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party)-affiliated person to our country. These are steps in the right direction. But, there is no concrete development regarding the extradition of terrorist-related criminals and the freezing of terrorist assets,” Cavusoglu said at a joint news conference with his visiting Swedish counterpart Tobias Billstrom.

A Swedish court’s decision to refuse Turkey’s demand to extradite journalist Bulent Kenes, whom Ankara accuses to be a member of the Gulen Movement, was “a very negative development”, the minister said.

The Swedish statements about lifting the restrictions to Turkey on defence industry products were positive, but Turkish defence companies have not yet received the necessary positive response in importing some products, Cavusoglu also said.

“Sweden keeps its promises. We take this deal very seriously. We have started to take our steps for each paragraph and we will continue to implement it,” Billstrom said.

“The PKK may not be a big threat in Sweden, but it is definitely a very important threat to Turkey and we take it very seriously,” the Swedish minister added.

Finland and Sweden’s NATO bid was initially blocked by the Turkish government, which accused them of supporting anti-Turkey groups as they rejected Ankara’s extradition requests for the suspects affiliated with the PKK and the Gulen Movement.

On June 28, Turkey, Sweden and Finland reached a trilateral memorandum of understanding (MoU) ahead of the NATO Madrid summit. The Nordic states pledged to support Turkey’s fight against terrorism and agreed to address Ankara’s pending extradition requests for terror suspects. Lifting defence industry restrictions on Turkey was another condition of the deal.

Sweden and Finland have restricted arms exports to T�rkiye after the country started a cross-border operation in northern Syria in 2019. On September 30, Sweden’s Inspectorate of Strategic Products, which controls arms exports, said it had authorised military exports to Turkey.

ALSO READ: Turkey in a fix over border crisis

Previous Story

India Policy Forum co-organises talk with LSESU India Society

Next Story

Ukraine is alive and will never surrender,says Zelensky

Latest from -Top News

GAZA KILLINGS: War Crime?

Mobile Phone Footage Casts Doubt on Israeli Account of Ambulance Attack in Gaza Newly surfaced mobile phone footage has raised serious questions about the Israeli military’s justification for opening fire on a

Namibia voices concern over US tariffs

AGOA is a non-reciprocal trade arrangement aimed at supporting development in African countries through preferential access to US markets The Namibian government has expressed concern over newly imposed US tariffs, warning that

Uganda, South Sudanese leaders hold talks

Museveni, who is among the guarantors of a 2018 peace agreement that ended a five-year civil war, held closed-door discussions with President Salva Kiir Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni was expected to meet

Protests across US against Trump

The largest event was at the National Mall in DC, where demonstrators numbered in the tens of thousands People across the US took to the streets on Saturday to oppose what left-leaning

Namibia voices concern over US tariffs

AGOA is a non-reciprocal trade arrangement aimed at supporting development in African countries through preferential access to US markets The Namibian government has expressed concern over newly imposed US tariffs, warning that
Go toTop

Don't Miss

‘Sweden will join NATO soon’

He also voiced hope that the process would get finished

Starmer to urge NATO members to boost defence spending

The PM will use NATO’s 75th-anniversary summit in Washington to