Wednesday, June 4, 2025
LibyaReview
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Economy
  • Sport
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Economy
  • Sport
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
LibyaReview
No Result
View All Result
Home Libya

Will Egypt’s Maritime Declaration Hurt the Turkish-Libyan Deal?

December 16, 2022
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Turkish-Libyan maritime memorandum received another blow to its credibility, after Egyptian President, Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s Presidential decree demarcated the Egypt-Libya maritime border unilaterally, with a western limit at the 25th meridian. This is even further west than the limit of the August 2020 Greece-Egypt partial demarcation agreement, Greek newspaper Ekathimerini said in a report.

The exploration for hydrocarbons to the southwest of the island of Crete, at the request of US oil giant ExxonMobil, was followed by the decree. This transfers Egypt’s claims against Libya further west, dealing another blow to the Turkish-Libyan memorandum.

In effect, it makes Tripoli’s desire for exploration south of Crete, where Egypt is now asserting claims, even more difficult.

The decree does not reach the median line (as perceived by Greece) leaving room for a future tripartite agreement between Greece, Egypt, and Libya. It does cover more of Crete against the possibility of Tripoli requesting that exploration be conducted by the Turkish Petroleum Corporation (TPAO), at a point near the east of the island.

This was the second serious challenge posed by Egypt to the provisions of the Turkish-Libyan memorandum. Far more stinging for Ankara was that it did not come after an agreement with Greece, but on the unilateral initiative of the Egyptian President.

Pairing El-Sisi’s announcements with ExxonMobil’s exploration activities, it becomes de facto evident to the Tripoli administration that it cannot act solely to serve Turkish interests in a way that violates the rights and concerns of other countries in the region.

El-Sisi’s message came immediately after the joint letter of the Turkish and Tripoli Foreign Ministers to the UN, against Greece’s rights off Crete.

“It is a unilateral demarcation. It is accurate under the law of the sea. And it wants to demonstrate its claims to the areas left out of the Greek-Egyptian demarcation west of the 26th meridian,” Petros Liakouras, Professor of international law and Director of the International and European Studies program at the University of Piraeus said.

He also stressed that El-Sisi’s decree “rams the Libyan side of the Libyan-Turkish demarcation. Now it extends this line. This helps us because it further cuts off the projection of the Turkish coast toward Libya.”

  • France Rejects Turkish-Libyan Energy Deal
  • Borrell Says EU’s Credibility At Stake in Libya
  • Egypt’s Foreign Minister Calls GNA-Turkey Maritime Demarcation Agreement “Illegal”
  • Egypt Demarcates Maritime Borders with Libya
  • US Warship Arrives in Crete to Monitor the Escalating Tensions Between Greece and Turkey
Tags: Egypt's Maritime DeclarationlibyaTurkish-Libyan Deal
Next Post

Libya Returns Looted Artifact from the US

POPULAR CATEGORIES

  • Home
  • Libya
  • Economy
  • Sport
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

MUST READ

Greece Eyes Libya Cooperation to Block Boats from Eastern Coast

Libyan Parliament Approves Budget for Reconstruction Fund

Saddam Haftar Attends French-Led Mediterranean Military Summit

Tripoli Government Assigns “Ali Al-Abed” as Acting Oil Minister

Dbaiba Unveils 3-Track Initiative to Resolve Libya’s Political Stalemate

Haftar: Libyan National Army Ready to Facilitate Elections

EDITOR PICKS

Over 3,000 Migrants Deported from Libya in May

GCC Ministers Reaffirm Support for Political Dialogue & Sovereignty in Libya

Libya & China Resume Talks on Misrata Cement Plant

Haftar: Libyan National Army Ready to Facilitate Elections

Saddam Haftar Attends French-Led Mediterranean Military Summit

Dbaiba Unveils 3-Track Initiative to Resolve Libya’s Political Stalemate

  • Home
  • Libya
  • Economy
  • Sport
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

© 2024 LR

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Economy
  • Sport
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

© 2024 LR