"The legal status of Imia is firmly established. Greek sovereignty over Imia is a given and beyond doubt. Turkey is mistaken if it thinks it can violate international law in the Aegean without consequences, as it does in other places in its environs. We would advise Turkey to measure its words," the ministry said in a Saturday statement.
The statement followed Ankara's harsh criticism of Greece’s newly adopted law which includes the Imia (Kardak) and some other islets in the Aegean Sea in the European Union’s "Natura 2000" environmental program.
On Saturday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry declared the piece of legislation void and claimed Turkey's sovereign rights over the Kardak rocks. Ankara also urged Athens to "act with common sense" and warned the European Union against becoming "a tool" in the hands of Greece with regard to the issue.
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In 1996, the dispute over the territorial affiliation of the two rocky islets of Imia (Kardak) in the Dodecanese archipelago in the Aegean Sea led to a crisis in relations between Greece and Turkey. The conflict was terminated after the intervention of the international community, NATO and the United States.