Türkiye denies harassing planes carrying Greek, EU officials

Türkiye’s Communications Directorate has rejected claims that Turkish F‑16s harassed aircraft carrying Greek Defence Minister Nikos Dendias and other European officials. Ankara stated that the jets conducted a precautionary patrol over Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus airspace, not Greek airspace.
Türkiye’s Communications Directorate on Monday dismissed reports that Turkish military aircraft harassed planes carrying Greek Defence Minister Nikos Dendias and other European officials or violated Greek airspace. In a statement, the Centre for Combating Disinformation (DMM) said the allegations were “completely false.”
Precautionary patrol
According to the DMM, four of six aircraft flying on the Greece‑Greek Cypriot Administration route on Sunday violated the airspace of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC). Two Turkish F‑16 fighter jets stationed in the TRNC on air patrol duty were immediately scrambled as a precautionary measure. “The aircraft carried out their mission over TRNC airspace and did not violate the airspace of the Greek Cypriot Administration. No harassment was conducted against the aircraft in question,” the statement said.
No Greek airspace violation
The centre also rejected allegations that Turkish aircraft violated Greek airspace during flights on June 6 as part of events marking the 115th anniversary of the Turkish Air Force Command and the Youth and Aviation Festival. “All flights were carried out within the designated flight zone of the 2nd Main Jet Base Command, and Greek airspace was not violated in any way,” it said. The DMM urged the public not to give credence to claims aimed at manipulating international opinion and provoking tensions.
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