President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Tuesday discussed the migrant crisis as well as the situation in Syria’s last rebel enclave of Idlib with the leaders of France, Germany and Britain, AFP reported.
The four-party video conference that involved French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson comes after Turkey decided last month to re-open its border for refugees seeking to reach Europe.
The move sparked tensions with Brussels and with neighboring Greece when thousands of migrants massed on the Turkish-Greek border.
“Humanitarian assistance for Idlib, and the refugee issue” were discussed at the video conference, according to the Turkish presidency, besides other issues including the Libya crisis.
Erdoğan’s move to open the gates for refugees heading to Europe came after more than 50 Turkish troops were killed in Syrian regime fire in the northwestern province of Idlib in February.
Turkey is home to some 4 million refugees — most of them Syrians — and is demanding greater assistance from the European Union amid fears of another influx from Idlib, where the regime backed by Russian air power has launched an offensive to take back the remaining territory.
Ankara hopes for progress on a new migrant deal with Brussels by the time of the next EU leaders’ summit on March 26.
Because of the growing spread of COVID-19, the conference on Tuesday was held via video conference rather than an actual meeting scheduled in Istanbul as previously announced by Erdogan.
The four leaders also discussed “joint action against coronavirus,” Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu tweeted.
Turkey has so far announced 98 confirmed cases of coronavirus and one death.