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Turkey Releases From Custody Greek Border Guards Suspected of Espionage

© REUTERS / Osman OrsalTurkish riot police stand guard outside the Justice Palace in Istanbul March 31, 2015.
Turkish riot police stand guard outside the Justice Palace in Istanbul March 31, 2015. - Sputnik International
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ATHENS (Sputnik) – Two Greek servicemen who were just released from custody in Turkey will return to their homeland on Wednesday, a source in the Greek Defense Ministry told Sputnik on Tuesday.

The Turkish NTV broadcaster reported earlier in the day that a Turkish court had ruled to release the border guards from custody, but the servicemen were still not allowed to leave Turkey, as the hearings on their case were to continue.

"We expect them tomorrow," the source said.

According to a statement by the press service of the Greek prime minister, a plane with the soldiers on board is expected to land in Thessaloniki after midnight on Wednesday.

"Under the order from Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, a plane with Georgios Katrougalos, the [Greek] deputy foreign minister, and Deputy Chief of Hellenic National Defense General Staff Konstantinos Floros will depart on [Tuesday] night… to take the two Greek soldiers. It is expected that the plane will land in Thessaloniki after midnight," the statement read.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras looks on during a meeting with Mayor of Piraeus Yannis Moralis (not pictured) at his office at the Maximos Mansion in Athens, Greece, February 11, 2016. - Sputnik International
Greek Prime Minister Concerned With Turkey’s Airspace Violations
The two soldiers have been held in Turkish custody since March on suspicions of espionage. Greece claims that the servicemen strayed into the Turkish territory by mistake during their patrol mission due to bad weather conditions.

Relations between Ankara and Athens are tense due to a standoff over a group of eight Turkish soldiers who fled to Greece after the 2016 failed coup in Ankara.

Turkey demands that Greece extradite the servicemen, but Athens refuses to do so citing concerns that the officers will not face a fair trial back home.

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