Dendias-Cavusoglu: ‘We need not wait for natural disasters to improve our relations’
Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias expressed his pride for the Greek rescue workers that “helped Turkish society and the Turkish people in this difficult hour,” during joint statements with his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu on Sunday in Antakya.
He offered the Turkish minister, the Turkish government and the Turkish people the deepest condolences of the government of Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and the Greek people for the thousands of human lives lost in the two devastating earthquakes that struck the region.
Dendias also said that Greece’s efforts to help the Turkish people and Turkish society overcome this major setback would not stop there.
“I have orders from Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to assure you that Greece will do everything it can to support Turkey at this difficult time, either bilaterally or in the framework of its participation in the European Union,” Dendias said.
He thanked Cavusoglu for his very warm words regarding the efforts of the Greek rescuers and the Greek presence in the area. Among others, the foreign minister fully endorsed Cavusoglu statement that “we need not wait for natural disasters in order to improve our relations.”
Dendias said he was very happy for the human lives that were saved by the Greek rescuers operating in Turkey, as well as the very many lives saved by European rescuers. “We had the opportunity with Mr. Cavusoglu to also visit the Austrian, the Dutch and Icelandic rescuers. From what they told us, 205 [people] were saved by them, including the Greeks,” he said.
Dendias additionally thanked his counterpart and the Turkish government for their very warm reception at a very difficult time for Türkiye.
Cavusoglu offers thanks to Greece for its support and solidarity
The Turkish minister, in his own statements, personally thanked Dendias, the Greek government and the Greek people for their solidarity and support, noting that good neighbor relations become apparent in such difficult days, and adding:
“We should not wait for yet another earthquake to improve our bilateral relations. I hope that we will make an effort to resolve our differences through dialogue.”
Harking back to the earthquakes of 1999 in Türkiye and Greece, after which the two countries had sped to help each other, and a letter he had then written to “Time” magazine, before becoming a politician, in which he said that the two countries should not wait for another earthquake to improve their relations, Cavusoglu said he repeated this now as the foreign minister of Türkiye.
He noted that Dendias’ presence in Türkiye demonstrated the support and solidarity of the Greek people toward the Turks, highlighting the fact that Greece was one of the first countries to contact Turkish authorities after the earthquake to offer sympathy and declare its willingness to help, with rescue teams and aircraft carrying humanitarian aid sent out immediately to the quake-stricken areas.
He also spoke about the contribution and the superhuman efforts of the Greek aid mission and rescue team and the visit by Climate Crisis and Civil Protection Minister Christos Stylianides, who accompanied the first wave of humanitarian aid from Greece, carried in five planes.
“We saw and watched that after the rescue of each life, each person, it was not only the Greeks in the search-and-rescue teams that rejoiced, we saw that all Greeks rejoiced,” he said.
AMNA