Turkey plans to bypass Syria for regional trade if conditions in the neighboring country deteriorate, the country's transport minister said Tuesday.
Turkey
plans
to bypass
Syria
for
regional trade if conditions in the neighboring country deteriorate, the
country's transport minister said Tuesday.
"If conditions aggravate in
Syria
, we
are planning to shift [road] transport to
Iraq
by
opening new gates," Transport Minister Binali Yildirim was quoted as
saying by the
Anatolia
news agency.
Turkey
's
move comes after Arab foreign ministers agreed Sunday a list of sweeping
sanctions designed to cripple the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, which
has defied international pressure to halt a bloody crackdown on protests.
Yildirim said the Arab sanctions against
Damascus
were
not yet fully implemented.
"
Turkey
is
supporting this work [Arab League decision] to some extent but our principle is
that the restrictions to be imposed should never victimize the Syrian
people," he warned.
Syria
is a
transit country for
Turkey
's
trade with Middle Eastern countries.
Turkey
and
Syria
, one
time allies, abolished visa requirements in 2009.
Ankara
has been increasingly strident in its criticism of
the Syrian regime, and has already halted joint oil exploration and threatened
to cut electricity supplies.
The government has not yet publicized the steps it is planning to take against
Damascus
but a
Turkish diplomat earlier told AFP that
Turkey
was
contemplating "smart sanctions" which would not harm civilians.
Turkish officials repeatedly said the delivery of water from
Turkey
's
Euphrates
river
to
Syria
was
not among the measures being considered.
Yildirim said
Turkey
wasn't allowing the transfer of arms to
Syria
,
while adding that no decision had yet been taken about civilian flights.
Current trade volume between
Turkey
and
Syria
stands at around $2.5 billion dollars, favorable to
Turkey
,
according to observers. Both countries had vowed to raise it to $5 billion
dollars in 2012.
But the sanctions planned by
Ankara
aimed
at punishing the Syrian regime for its ongoing violence, which has claimed more
than 3,500 lives according to the United Nations, are likely to dent this
objective.
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