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 “All tourism workers to be vaccinated, certification criteria for accommodation facilities made stricter”

 

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu addresses a news conference in Berlin with his German counterpart Heiko Maas.

Turkey has taken steps to ensure safe and healthy tourism in the country, the Turkish foreign minister said on Thursday.

Mevlut Cavusoglu said all people working in Turkey’s tourism sector will be vaccinated against COVID-19.

Some 26% of Turkey’s population has already been vaccinated, he added.

Cavusoglu said authorities have made the certification criteria for accommodation facilities even more stringent.

“Practices to ensure safe and healthy tourism are in place. Last year, inspections were carried out twice a month. This year, there are four inspections in a month by companies from Germany, the UK, France, and Turkey,” he said.

Safety measures have been increased in tourism hubs such as Mugla, Antalya, and Izmir, he added.

The foreign minister said PCR tests will continue to be carried out at airports, hotels, and hospitals.

Cavusoglu stressed that Turkey is in a better position in terms of safe tourism, despite the worsening pandemic situation around the world this year.

Humanitarian crisis in northern Syria

German Foreign Minister Maas said they have discussed various international issues with his Turkish counterpart, including Libya, Afghanistan and Syria.

“We are also concerned about the situation in Syria, where millions of people are dependent on international humanitarian aid,” he said, and criticized Russia for blocking cross-border humanitarian aid to northern Syria.

Moscow has long opposed the cross-border mechanism which enables the delivery of UN aid from Turkey to Idlib in northern Syria, and threatened to veto a UN Security Council resolution for its extension.

Maas said both Germany and Turkey share a common understanding on this issue, and expect Russia to change its approach and allow the cross-border support’s extension at the UN Security Council in July.


Positive atmosphere in EU-Turkey relations

Praising the dialogue and cooperation between Germany and Turkey amid the coronavirus pandemic, Cavusoglu said they marked the 60th anniversary of the labor recruitment agreement, which enabled a great number of Turkish citizens to immigrate to Germany.

"Bilateral trade volume with Germany may exceed $40 billion this year,” the Turkish foreign minister said.

On Turkey-EU relations, Cavusoglu said there is a positive atmosphere in relations and that Germany has greatly contributed to this.

“It is time to take concrete steps,” he said, adding that negotiations to update the Customs Union should begin without preconditions.

Underlining the importance of high-level contacts, he said all aspects of the 2016 EU-Turkey migration deal should be reviewed and implemented more effectively.

The EU had promised to enhance political and economic cooperation with Ankara as part of the deal by accelerating Turkey’s EU membership talks, modernizing the EU-Turkey Customs Union and allowing visa-free travel for Turkish nationals within the Schengen area.

But several EU members, including France, Greece and the Greek Cypriot administration, blocked closer cooperation with Turkey because of bilateral problems or tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Cavusoglu thanked Germany for its “constructive and prudent approach” on different agenda items, for its support to de-escalate tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean and efforts for a settlement on Cyprus.

“While we are trying to improve our bilateral relations in the upcoming period, we are determined to continue our cooperation with Germany on regional issues as well,” he added.

The German foreign minister also welcomed de-escalation of tensions in the region and expressed hope that dialogue between Turkey and Greece, and the UN’s efforts for a Cyprus settlement would open the way for long-term solution to the current problems.

"Germany is in favor of constructive relations with Turkey," Maas stressed, adding that his government supports closer dialogue between the EU and Turkey.


Despite difficulties experienced in 2020, relations seem to be much better this year, he added.

Von der Leyen’s Ankara visit

On the controversy over seating arrangements during top EU officials’ visit to Ankara in April, Cavusoglu reiterated that the issue had nothing to do with Turkey.

The issue stemmed from the rivalry between the European Commission and the Council, he said, adding the protocol team of the Commission did not attend a preparatory meeting.

Despite knowing this, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s claim that the issue was gender-related is not right, he said.

Underlining that Turkey hosted many women leaders in the past, but it did not experience any such problem, he said that women in Turkey have an important role in politics, business life and society.

“I hope this will not repeat again within the European Union,” he added.

During the top EU officials’ visit to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, there was momentary confusion over where von der Leyen would sit.

Turkish officials have repeatedly said that they strictly followed protocol instructions from the EU side.

Extensive reporting on the issue suggests that miscommunication on the EU side – due in part to von der Leyen’s protocol team staying in Brussels due to the COVID-19 pandemic – was responsible for the confusion, and that Turkey played no part in the incident.

Cooperation in joint vaccine production

Responding to a question over the US decision to support lifting intellectual property protection on coronavirus vaccines in order to stop the pandemic, Cavusoglu underlined the importance of better cooperation and joint production.

Cavusoglu said Turkey has advocated that no country should be left behind in medical supplies since the beginning of the pandemic, adding Turkey has the same opinion on vaccines.

“Respecting copyrights of firms that develop COVID vaccines, countries need to cooperate better in joint production,” he said.

Emphasizing that international organizations, including the World Health Organization, should undertake coordination and facilitating roles, Cavusoglu said: "This problem will remain. We see that vaccines will be needed in the coming months and years. For this reason, a better cooperation, including joint production, is needed for the vaccine to reach the whole world."

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