Nato pledges Turkey quake aid, appeals for Finland, Sweden
Deutsche Welle :
Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said in Turkey on Thursday that the military alliance would be sending “tens of thousands of tents” to the country as authorities race to offer shelter to people left homeless following last week’s major earthquake.
“In your time of need, Nato stands with Turkey,” Stoltenberg said in talks with Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. “This is the deadliest natural disaster on alliance territory since Nato was founded,” he said, adding that Nato would use its “strategic airlift capabilities” to transport aid more swiftly. In Turkey alone, more than 50,000 buildings were destroyed or heavily damaged across 11 provinces by the quake.
Stoltenberg will also visit areas affected by the quake during his trip.
‘The time is now to ratify both Finland and Sweden’
But Stoltenberg also repeated his appeal to Turkey to approve of Finland and Sweden’s bids to join Nato. The two Nordic countries, neutral throughout the Cold War, sought membership in the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“I continue to believe that the time is now to ratify both Finland and Sweden,” Stoltenberg said.
All existing Nato members’ legislatures must ratify the entry of any potential new member.
So far, only Turkey and Hungary, arguably the two Nato members still seeking to maintain more cordial ties with Moscow since Russia invaded Ukraine, have not done so. Hungary has parliamentary votes on the matter scheduled for March.
Turkey resisted Finland and Sweden’s bids from the outset, accusing both countries of harboring people it considers terrorists, usually either Kurds or supporters of Fethullah Gulen, a cleric and former ally living in the US whom President Recep Tayyip Erdogan now blames for orchestrating a 2016 failed coup attempt.
But Turkey’s objection to Sweden’s bid, in particular, has become more strident in recent weeks. This follows a pair of public protests in Sweden – the first by Kurdish activists and the second by far-right activists – involving the burning of an effigy of Erdogan and then of copies of the Quran.
Nato countries have been lobbying Ankara to reconsider its position. German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, for instance, made similar appeals this week on a visit to Finland and then Sweden.
