Putin, Erdogan may discuss Turkey’s compensation for downed Su-24 bomber
August 05, 17:13 UTC+3
Putin and Erdogan will discuss lifting of Russia’s ban on imports of Turkish products, resumption of charter flights, the Turkish Stream project, Syrian settlement, anti-terrorism efforts on August 9,
Presidents of Russia and Turkey, Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdogan
© Mikhail Metzel/TASS
MOSCOW, August 5. /TASS/. Turkey has not paid Russia any
compensation for the downed Russian Su-24 bomber but this issue may be raised
at an upcoming meeting of Russian and Turkish leaders Vladimir Putin and Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said on Friday.
The meeting of the Russian and Turkish presidents is scheduled to take
place in St. Petersburg on August 9.
"No, no compensation has been paid," the presidential aide
said, responding to the relevant question.
"This issue will probably also be discussed," Ushakov said,
without specifying whether it was possible that Russia would drop its
compensation claim.
The presidential aide also noted that "much was said" in
Erdogan’s letter to Putin in June, in which the Turkish president apologized for
the incident with the Russian bomber and these steps in subsequent telephone
talks between the two leaders made possible the upcoming meeting in St.
Petersburg "and, I hope, will lead to further normalization of the entire
range of our relations with Turkey."
The relations between Russia and Turkey deteriorated sharply after a
Turkish Air Force F-16 fighter jet downed a Russian Su-24M bomber in the sky
over Syria on November 24, 2015. The Russian bomber participated in the
anti-terror operation in Syria.
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Putin, Erdogan to discuss food ban, charter flights, Turkish Stream,
Syria
Presidents Vladimir Putin of Russia and Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey
will discuss lifting of Russia’s ban on imports of Turkish products, resumption
of charter flights, the Turkish Stream project, Syrian settlement,
anti-terrorism efforts and other topical issues at their meeting in Russia’s
St. Petersburg on August 9, Ushakov said.
"Topics for discussion will include the resumption of exports of
Turkish food products to Russia, with a focus of the Turkish authorities’
efforts to prevent re-export to Russia via the Turkish territory of products
from the European Union countries and some other states which are covered by
Russian restrictive measures taken as response to the European Union’s
sanctions," Ushakov said. "The sides are discussing conditions for
re-launching charter air service and this issue will also be discussed by the
two leaders."
Apart from that, according to Ushakov, the two presidents will discuss
the construction of the Akkuyu nuclear power plant, issues of the Turkish
Stream project and other economic topics.
Other top-priority topics will include the Syrian crisis and
anti-terrorism efforts, the Kremlin aide added.
"I generally agree with the Turkish president’s representative who
said yesterday that the top-priority topics of the St. Petersburg talks will be
issues of bilateral relations, the Syrian crisis and anti-terrorism
efforts," Ushakov said. "The top priority task of the forthcoming St.
Petersburg meeting is to establish a normal level of bilateral cooperation in
the political, trade-and-economic, energy and other spheres."
Speaking about economic cooperation, the Kremlin aide noted that
bilateral trade in 2015 dropped by 26% to 23.3 billion years (year-on-year) and
further down by 43% in January-May 2016, to 6.1 billion U.S. dollars (in five
months).
"The president will discuss issues of the resumption of work of the
existing cooperation mechanisms," Ushakov said, adding that sectoral
ministries and agencies will be tasked to resume work on draft bilateral
documents geared to remove the existing barriers in trade.
Yet another topic for discussion, according to the presidential aide,
will be measures "to gradually lift restrictions on employment of Turkish
citizens and companies in the construction projects in Russia. "Some of
the large-scale projects in this area continue to be implemented," he
said.
The Syrian crisis and anti-terrorism efforts will also be top on the
meeting’s agenda, Ushakov added.
The Kremlin hopes that Ankara’s approach towards the Syrian settlement
will be more constructive and that it will be possible to bring the stances of
Russia and Turkey on this issue closer together, Russian presidential aide
said.
"Naturally, the Syrian crisis will be discussed in detail, and we
hope that the Turkish stance in this context will be more constructive,"
the Kremlin aide said. The Russian side hopes that the disparities in the two
countries’ stances on the issue will be ‘narrowed’, Ushakov pointed out.
He added that the Russian and Turkish Defense Ministers will not take
part in the upcoming negotiations. However, experts dealing with the Syrian
issues will take part in the talks.
Moscow earlier criticized Turkey for supporting extremists fighting in
Syria. Russian President Vladimir Putin said during his annual
question-and-answer session last December that entities close to the Turkish
authorities purchase crude oil from Syria’s areas controlled by terrorists.
Large-scale bilateral summit in 2017
Russia and Turkey may held a bilateral summit next year, Russian
presidential aide Yuri Ushakov told reporters on Friday ahead of the August 9
meeting of the two countries' Presidents Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip
Erdogan in St. Petersburg.
Ushakov expressed the hope that the negotiations will be
"constructive and positive."
"If all goes well - and I hope so, the parties will apparently
agree on holding a regular meeting of the High Level Cooperation Council
chaired by the two countries' presidents that includes virtually all key
ministers dealing with the development of the bilateral relations," he
said.
According to Ushakov, if such an agreement is reached, the venue and
dates of the summit will be agreed via appropriate channels. "Apparently,
it will be Moscow, since the previous meeting was held in Turkey," he
said.
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Meeting with representatives of business community
The August 9 Russian-Turkish summit in St. Petersburg will include
meetings with representatives of the two countries’ business communities,
Russian presidential aide said.
Ushakov noted that the two leaders will first hold a meeting in the
narrow format and then - in the extended format with the participation of
several ministers. Their joint news conference is planned after that followed
by the two presidents’ meeting with representatives of the Russian and Turkish
business communities.
"A number of our personalities who are well familiar with the
Turkish affairs are invited to the meeting with representatives of the business
communities," Ushakov said, adding that these will include Gazprom CEO
Alexei Miller, President of Tatarstan Rustam Minnikhanov and head of the
Russian Direct Investment Fund Kirill Dmitriev.
"The meeting itself will be arranged as follows. The two presidents
will speak first, then the two countries’ economy ministers will brief those
present on the prospects for cooperation. After that a free discussion will be
held," Ushakov said.
No documents planned to be signed
Russia and Turkey plan to sign no documents after a meeting between
Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdogan St. Petersburg on August 9, Yuri
Ushakov.
"No, no documents are expected to be signed," he told
journalists. "It will be their first meeting after a long break literally
in all contacts - political, trade-and-economic and others."
"That is why it is important to have a detailed conversation now to
understand where we are and outline possible prospects for further cooperation.
This meeting is important and needs not to be supplemented by any
documents," Ushakov said, adding that its key task will be to reach mutual
understanding on many issues on the agenda, both bilateral and linked with
international and regional politics, including the situation in Syria.
The Kremlin aide reminded that the previous meeting between the two
presidents took place in November 2015 on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty
summit in Turkey’s Antalya. Resumption of top-level dialogue has become
possible following Erdogan’s message to the Russian leader on June 27. After
that date, Putin and Erodgan had two telephone conversations and
"expressed mutual readiness to take necessary steps in order to gradually
restore bilateral relations," Ushakov noted.
He also reminded that the Russian government has been tasked to conduct
consultations with the Turkish partners. Thus, the two countries’ deputy prime
ministers met in late July. This meeting was followed by a meeting of the
co-chairs of the intergovernmental commission. Apart from that, Russian
Minister of Economic Development Alexei Ulyukayev met with his Turkish counterpart.
"It was agreed to hold a meeting of the intergovernmental commission in
the autumn," Ushakov added.
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More:
http://tass.ru/en/politics/892742
http://tass.ru/en/politics/892742
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