ATP - President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan denied Thursday that Turkey bought any oil from the
Islamic State group, insisting his country's fight against the jihadists was
"undisputed".
"Shame
on you. Those who claim we buy oil from Daesh (IS) are obliged to prove it. If
not, you are a slanderer," Erdogan said, lashing out at Russian charges
after the downing of a warplane on the Syrian border.
Tuesday's
incident prompted a tough response from Moscow, a major trade partner and
Turkey's largest energy supplier.
But
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Ankara did not need to apologise
"on an occasion that we are right," adding that he had already said
"sorry" in a phone call with Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin has denounced the act as a "stab in the
back" by "accomplices of terrorists."
But
Erdogan denied Ankara was collaborating with IS.
"Our
country's stance against Daesh has been clear since the very beginning,"
Erdogan said in a speech to local officials at his presidential palace in the
Turkish capital.
"There
is no question mark here. Nobody has the right to dispute our country's fight
against Daesh or to incriminate us."
Turkey
and Russia stand on opposing sides of the four-year Syrian conflict, with
Ankara pushing for the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad by backing moderate
opposition rebels.
Moscow
is one of the few remaining allies of the Damascus regime.
Russia
further enraged Turkey with the launch of its air campaign in Syria in
September, accusing Moscow of focusing its fire on moderate rebels rather than
IS jihadists.
"Those
who carry out a military campaign with the pretext of fighting Daesh are
targeting anti-regime opponents," Erdogan said.
"You
say you are fighting Daesh. Excuse me, but you are not fighting Daesh. You are
killing our Turkmen kinsmen hand-in-hand with the regime in order to clear
areas north of Latakia," he said, referring to the Syrian port city.
IS
extremists have severely damaged Islam and the Muslims, he said, but added
there was no difference between "an organisation's terror and state
terror," referring to the Assad regime.
Erdogan
called Russia a "strategic partner" which he said required solidarity
rather threats. "We are saddened by this," he said.
"There
is no reason for us to target Russia with which we have multi-faceted and very
strong ties, without any border violation," he noted, saying that
disagreements with Moscow over the Syrian crisis and Ankara's activating its
military rules of engagement were two separate things.
"If
the same incursion happens today, Turkey will be obliged to retaliate."
Erdogan
also hit back at Putin's charges that Turkey's leaders were encouraging the
Islamisation of the country.
"How
dare you speak like that," said Erdogan. "Ninety-nine percent of
Turkey is Muslim."
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