Turkey, UK plan post-Brexit free trade deal

British Prime Minister Theresa May shaking hands with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Saturday.
British Prime Minister Theresa May shaking hands with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Saturday.
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Agencies, Ankara :
British Prime Minister Theresa May on Saturday promised steps to ramp up trade between Turkey and Britain ahead of Brexit but also urged Ankara to uphold human rights following a failed coup.
On her first visit to Turkey as premier and fresh from meeting new US President Donald Trump at the White House, May held three hours of talks with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
May sought to strike a delicate balance between showing Britain’s keen interest in expanding trade with Turkey following the June vote to leave the European Union while echoing European alarm over the scale of the crackdown after the July 15 attempted coup. May announced the creation of a joint group to boost trade ahead of Britain’s departure from the EU and also oversaw the signing of a deal for Britain’s BAE Systems to develop a new Turkish fighter jet.
Turkey and the United Kingdom plan to sign a free trade deal once Britain leaves the European Union, Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said on Saturday.
Yildirim made the comment in a joint news conference with UK Prime Minister Theresa May, who was visiting Ankara after a trip to the United States.
May said after meeting Erdogan at his palace she was “proud” Britain had stood with Turkey’s democratically-elected government when the coup struck. But she added: “Now it is important that Turkey sustains that democracy by maintaining the rule of law and upholding its international human rights obligations, as the government has undertaken to do.” May stressed that Turkey was one of Britain’s “oldest friends” with relations going back over 400 years, referring to the establishment of relations between the Ottoman Empire and England under Elizabeth I.
Earlier, a spokeswoman countered criticism from some MPs that Britain was cosying up to Turkey while turning a blind eye to its human rights record.
The spokeswoman said: “I don’t think there are any issues that the prime minister is afraid to bring up.” Around 43,000 people are under arrest on charges of links to the coup bid, which Ankara blames on the US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen. He denies the charges.
May’s visit is also seen as the first to Ankara by a major Western leader since the attempted putsch, although then US vice president Joe Biden held talks with Erdogan in August.
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