Adıvar
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2015
- Messages
- 1,540
- Reaction score
- 0
- Country
- Location
I don't know turkish, but do you even know where those islands are situated? Gavdos(and not Gravdos, you don't even seem know the island's name), Gaidhouronisi are just under Crete, Dionisades above it, what legal claims Turkey has there?
Koufonisi? Lol, which of all, cause there are Koufonisia(plural), it is Kato(lower) and Ano(upper) Koufonisi they are situated in Cyclades islands, very far away from turkish mainland. This is a joke of a claim, i could as well claim Imrali Adasi, just because i think i can invade and conquer it. Nothing different from what Hitler did..
No greek invaders dude, i can't put a link yet cause i have to reach 30 posts, but google the protocol annexed to italian-turkish agreement of 1932. You gave it to the italians back then and we got it later from them along with whatever islands they had in the Aegean, as having being in the winners side, and winning against the italian invaders.
Apres quoi les deux Delegations d' un commun accord ont trace sur les cartes hydrographiques anglaises Nos.236, 872, 1546. La ligne frontiere qui passe par les points suivants:
- 10 milles au sud de liflet de Volos,
- a moitie distance entre la phare de Kumburnu (Rhodes) et Pandian Point (Anatolia).
[Twenty seven (27) additional sections follow, which designate the line of demarcation]
- a moitie distance entre Kardak [Imia] (R.k.s.)et Kato I. (Anatolie),
4 January 1932 and 28 December 1932 Turkish-Italian documents
Her succession of the Italian titles in the Aegean through the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty.
It is interesting to note that there is no mention of any "Imia Islet" in these documents. The 4 January 1932 Agreement does not concern the Kardak Rocks. A reference was made to the Kardak Rocks in the 28 December 1932 Document. However, legal procedures with regard to the latter were not completed. Neither was it registered with the League of Nations.
Article 18 of the Covenant of the League of Nations reads as follows; "Every Treaty or International Engagement entered into hereinafter by any Member of the League shall be forthwith registered with the Secretariat and shall as soon as possible be published by it. No such Treaty or International Engagement shall be binding until so registered." Therefore, no legally binding document exists in this respect.
That Italy has approached the Turkish Government in 1937 raising the issue of ratification of the 28 December 1932 document is an additional indication against its validity. This Italian demarche was never responded to and no such action was ever taken.
The Greek proposal submitted during the negotiations of the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty to make a reference to the 1932 two documents was not accepted, and no such reference was included in the text of the Treaty.
The fact that Greece has approached the Turkish Government in 1950 and yet again in 1953 proposing talks with a view to exchanging letters between the two Governments ascertaining the validity of the above-mentioned two documents between Turkey and Greece shows that Greece also had doubts a
s to their validity.
The only document that may be referred to regarding the sovereignty of Dodecanese islands, as already been pointed out, is the 1947 Paris Peace Treaty. This Treaty in its Article 14 enumerates those islands to be transfered to Greek sovereignty one by one. Kardak, is not mentioned among these. The Kardak formations are not "islets" but two rocks. They lie 5.5 miles away from the nearest Dodecanese island. Therefore they do not fit into the definition of "adjacent islets" as stipulated by the Article 14 of the said Treaty.
Quoted from:
http://www.mfa.gov.tr/background-note-on-aegean-disputes.en.mfa
You can find all treaties/agreements Turkey signed since 1923 in the above link.