The Turkish foreign minister has lashed out at Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi after he earlier tonight lamented how VDL was treated and called Erdogan a “dictator”.
“I felt very sorry for the humiliation that European Commission President von der Leyen had to undergo,” Draghi said during a press conference earlier tonight.
“With these — let’s call them for what they are — dictators, which we however need to cooperate with...one has to be frank in expressing a diversity of views, opinions, behaviors, visions of society,” the Italian prime minister said of the Turkish president.
Asked about Italian PM's comments, EU foreign affairs spokesman says the Ankara meeting was "part of the efforts by EU to make sure that we try to get back to a normal constructive cooperation with Turkey, as requested by [EU prime ministers] in the latest Council conclusions."
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EU member states and the Commission need to take a decision now about whether they’re going to add #SputnikV to the EU joint procurement program. Otherwise some countries look set to follow Hungary and purchase their own.
But there’s a deep division on this among EU countries.
The Commission has gone out of its way to say it’s perfectly fine for Hungary to purchase Sputnik on its own since it isn’t part of EU joint procurement.
But the reality is it’s very complicated for everyone involved, and goes against the spirit of The EU joint strategy.
German MEP @peterliese, health lead for Merkel & VDL’s EPP, said yesterday he thinks the EU EMA is going to approve Sputnik.
If they do, he says, then EU countries should use it without hesitation.
He starts by expressing regret at what took place - the closest we've yet come to an apology.
"I did not stand up because it would have created an even more serious diplomatic incident," says President Michel.
"The images are brutal but do not reflect the content of our meeting," he insists. He notes the meeting was sensitive, he's trying to rescue relations with Turkey
President Michel gives same description of the premises inspection given by the Council's protocol team a few hours earlier.
"It was not possible to enter the room in question" and so the Council didn't know about chair situation before he arrived.
#Sofagate has turned into a whodunnit with the Turks now claiming the seating arrangement was cleared by an EU protocol team.
The Commission says their team wasn't there. So was it Michel's team that orchestrated the two chairs, or the Turks? Was it intentional, or a mistake?
This all may seem like an inconsequential focus on musical chairs, but it's being seen as an indicator of 4 important things:
🇹🇷 Turkey's treatment of women
😡 Erdogan's antagonism toward EU
🇪🇺 Possible conflict between EU's two presidents
🤷♂️ Why there are 2 EU presidents at all
BREAKING: An updated assessment by the EU Medicines Agency finds there *is* a possible link between the #AstraZeneca vaccine and "very rare cases of unusual blood clots with low blood platelets."
This seems as good a time as any to rekindle the debate over whether 🇪🇺 should reduce its 2⃣presidents to 1⃣.
The Council President position was only created in 2009. It was 1st conceived as a replacement for EC President as the EU's voice on world stage. politico.eu/article/jean-c…
Big names were in running to be 1st proper "President of the EU", including Tony Blair.
But in 2009 EU PMs decided to immediately dilute the new top jobs by choosing weak first occupants. So the EU's been left with 2 presidents; not the original intention gulfstreamblues.blogspot.com/2009/11/eu-low…
BTW, it's often claimed in anglophone media that the EU has 5 presidents. It doesn't.
The word 'president' is used in continental Europe for many different types of posts. The EU parliament president is more like the speaker of the house in UK. gulfstreamblues.blogspot.com/2016/06/no-eu-…