Regional cooperation essential to ending bloodshed in MENA region, says Erdoğan


President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said yesterday that strong cooperation is necessary to stop the ongoing bloodshed in Iraq, Syria and Yemen. He also called on nations in the region not to fall into the trap of external powers and to sustain regional stability by avoiding conflicts that have been instigated on the grounds of ethnic and sectarian differences.

"We have to remove the murderers, who have no ethics, values and principles and have been massacring innocent people, from our region. We cannot let the killings of these terror groups incriminate Muslims. We have to be aware of those who aim to push our region into an ethnic and sectarian-based conflict and chaos. We cannot put our future in danger for the interests of foreign elements. Our first priority is to stop the bloodshed and unrest in brother countries, such as Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Libya," President Erdoğan said in Pakistan's capital Islamabad during the speech he delivered at the 13th Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO) Summit.

He also called for more cooperation and asked to stand in solidarity with the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (KKTC) and Azerbaijan during the speech on Wednesday. ECO is a Eurasian political and economic intergovernmental organization whose members include Turkey, Pakistan, Iran and a number of Central Asian countries. Regarding the KKTC, which is officially recognized only by the Republic of Turkey, Erdoğan called on ECO member states to stand in solidarity against the international isolation imposed on the Turkish entity.

''The Azerbaijani territory of Karabakh has been occupied for 20 years. The negotiations to settle the issue peacefully seem to have failed. ECO, as well as the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) need to intervene and make necessary arrangements so that the Armenian invasion is condemned on a world stage,'' Erdoğan said.

He added that the international mediators - the Minsk Group - had failed to find a peaceful solution to the Karabakh conflict. The Minsk Group, created in 1992, leads the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe's (OSCE) efforts to find a solution to the dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

An Azerbaijani soldier was killed on Monday in a border clash, the country's Defense Ministry said. On Feb. 24, five soldiers were similarly killed. Last week's incident almost coincided with the 20th anniversary of the Khojaly Massacre of Feb. 25-26, 1992, in which Armenian forces killed 613 Azerbaijanis in Karabakh. Clashes in the occupied Karabakh region, which pro-Armenian militia took over in 1993, are nothing new. In April 2016, more than 270 military personnel lost their lives in the worst-ever breach of a 1994 treaty between the sides, according to the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry. Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a six-year war over occupied Karabakh in the early 1980s until the 1994 ceasefire. Three United Nations Security Council Resolutions (853, 874 and 884) and U.N. General Assembly Resolutions 19/13 and 57/298 refer to Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan. The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe refers to the region as being occupied by Armenian forces.

Turkey's president on Wednesday also urged the need for resolutions of political disputes between the members of ECO and called for joint efforts to tackle terrorism. "We need to take matters into our own hands," he said.