Cyprus on Friday lashed out at Turkey's new attempt to drill for gas in waters where European energy companies are already licensed to conduct a hydrocarbons search, calling it a severe escalation of Ankara's illegal actions and vowing to fight the move.
In a strongly worded statement, the Cypriot government denounced the arrival of the Turkish drillship Yavuz in an area licensed to France's Total and Italy's Eni as utterly provocative and aggressive behaviour in defiance of international calls to respect the east Mediterranean island nation's sovereign rights.
It said Ankara is putting regional stability and security at risk by choosing to irreversibly depart from international legality, adding it would not yield to threats and bullying tactics of a bygone era.
Illegality, no matter how often it's repeated, does not generate law, the Cypriot government said, adding that it would step up its legal and diplomatic fight especially within the European Union.
Turkey doesn't recognise Cyprus as a state and claims some 44 per cent of the island's exclusive economic zone as its own, saying it's acting to protect its interests and those of breakaway Turkish Cypriots.
The EU has already imposed sanctions against Turkey for earlier drilling activities in waters where Cyprus has exclusive economic rights but that aren't licensed out to energy companies.
More From This Section
The Yavuz is the second warship-escorted drillship that Turkey has dispatched to drill off Cyprus, joining the Fatih and other research vessels.
The Cypriot government has issued international arrest warrants against top executives from energy companies assisting the Turkish drillships.
The Yavuz has sailed into an area inside Block 7, some 50 miles (80 kilometers) off the town of Paphos on Cyprus' southwestern coast, which is licensed to Eni and Total but which Turkey claims partly falls within its own continental shelf.
Cyprus split along ethnic lines following a 1974 Turkish invasion triggered by a coup aiming at union with Greece.
Athough the island joined the EU in 2004, only the southern, internationally recognised part enjoys full membership benefits.
Eni and Total have teamed up to expand their hydrocarbon search off Cyprus and currently hold licenses for seven of Cyprus' 13 blocks inside the island's exclusive economic zone.
Other licensed companies include ExxonMobil and Texas-based Noble Energy along with partners Shell and Israel's Delek.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content