14 Sep 2022; MEMO: The new Swedish government should now address security concerns that Turkiye has raised in return for lifting its veto on Sweden and Finland's membership of NATO, Turkey's Foreign Minister said on Wednesday, Reuters reports.
The two countries applied to join the security alliance in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, but faced opposition from Turkiye which accuses them of imposing arms embargoes on Ankara and supporting groups it deems terrorists.
Turkiye lifted its veto during a NATO summit in June in return for what it said were concrete gains on the issue. But Ankara has since said the Nordic countries have not taken the desired steps.
Foreign Minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, said Turkiye had not expected Sweden to take steps before last Sunday's election but the next government in Stockholm must now make a move on the issue.
"They know this agreement will not be approved by the (Turkish) Parliament unless they take (steps)," he said.
Sweden's right-wing opposition holds a narrow lead over the ruling centre-left bloc, as counting nears its end.
According to readout of a briefing with reporters in Ankara, Cavusoglu said a meeting between the three countries on 26 August showed the Nordic States had not yet acted on Turkiye's concerns.
"The following outcome has emerged: no concrete steps have been taken, up to today," he said.
The three countries signed an Accord to lift Ankara's veto in exchange for counter-terrorism promises, but Turkiye has said it will block the membership bids if pledges are not kept. It has sought the extradition of 73 people from Sweden and a dozen others from Finland.
Officials from the three countries agreed in August to keep meeting in the coming months to discuss Turkiye's concerns.
"There is an agreement and the requirements of this deal are clear. These must be fulfilled," Cavusoglu said.