Greece, Albania discussing EEZ, not land border

22 February, 2019

The land border between Greece and Albania is not among the issues being discussed between the two countries, sources from the Greek Foreign Ministry said in a statement Friday, in response to suggestions to that effect on Thursday by Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama.

“The two countries are not discussing their borders, as those have been determined by international agreements and no negotiation is taking place over them,” the sources told the state-run Athens-Macedonian News Agency (ANA-MPA).

In May 2018, the two countries reopened negotiations to delineate maritime borders in the Ionian Sea and resolve other bilateral issues.

The same sources said Athens and Tirana signed a friendship agreement in 1996, in which they proclaimed their respect for the inviolability of existing borders.

Speaking during an interview with Albania’s Vizion Plus TV on Thursday, Rama appeared to suggest that Athens and Tirana are in talks over potential border changes.

The comment was made in the context of negotiations between Serbia and Kosovo over a land swap as a way of ending a long-running dispute between the two countries.

“What is it that we are discussing with Greece today? The border. What did Kosovo and Montenegro discuss and achieve? The border. Why is it that the border between Kosovo and Serbia should not be discussed? It will surely be discussed [whether] you like it or not. A [border] demarcation process will take place in this case too,” he was quoted as saying.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Giorgos Katrougalos said Friday that Greece was ready to extend its territorial waters in the Ionian Sea in the summer.

“This will help negotiations with Italy and Albania t

Dark
Light

Latest News

What just happened to Bonza? Why new budget airlines always struggle in Australia

The history of budget jet airlines in Australia is a
Global Military Budgets

The US has unequivocally lost the race for supremacy

This situation is quite confussing. The American Enterprise Institute (AEI),

How Greece became a leader of growth in Europe

New York Times: How Greece went from being the “black