Turkey denied the accusation, saying that the plane took off from Iraq without a specific flight path, but it was allowed to pass after this route was clarified.
A spokesman said Greek government Reporters, Stelios Petsas: It is “another provocation in the series of Turkish provocations … I hope the incident will not be repeated in the future.”
Tensions have escalated between the two countries, the two NATO partners, who are locked in a dispute over the maritime borders in the eastern Mediterranean, with each of them claiming sovereignty over sea areas believed to be rich in gas.He added that the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs had lodged a complaint with the Turkish authorities.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman, Hami Aksoy, refused to suggest that the plane carrying Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias was deliberately disrupted to provoke Athens.
He said, “The aircraft in question took off from Iraq without providing a specific route for flight. When the plane entered our airspace, we asked the Iraqi authorities for the flight path quickly, and the flight proceeded safely after obtaining it.”He stated that Turkey had agreed to a Greek request to allow the minister’s plane to pass through its airspace on its way to Iraq, on October 14th.
He said that after that plane crashed in Iraq, Greece sent a second plane that was also granted permission to fly in Turkish airspace, with the same flight permit number without any delay.