
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday ruled out reconciliation with Egypt, despite a diplomatic blitz that has seen Ankara mend fences with Russia and Israel.
Ties between Turkey and Egypt ruptured in 2013 after President Muhammad Mursi, a close ally of Erdogan’s AKP government, was ousted.
Observers had suggested a rapprochement may be in the cards after last week saw Turkey restore ties with Russia and Israel following bitter diplomatic rows, seeking to boost trade and shore up its regional clout.
But Erdogan said Tuesday that a thaw with Egypt’s “oppressive regime” should not be expected any time soon.
“The context with Egypt is different from the approaches undertaken with Russia and Israel,” the Turkish strongman told journalists in comments cited by Dogan news agency.
He stressed that Turkey’s dispute was with Egypt’s government, not its people, and repeated his condemnation of the crackdown on Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood.
“Sentences handed down to Mursi and his friends have been based on fabrications,” he said.
“These people are our brothers, we cannot accept these decisions by an oppressive regime.”
Erdogan has previously condemned the “coup” against Mursi, and in a show of solidarity at rallies he often uses a four-finger hand gesture known as “Rabia” — seen as a symbol of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Source: Arab News
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