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OIL AND GAS
Cyprus orders missiles amid Turkey gas tensions
by Staff Writers
Nicosia (AFP) Feb 7, 2020

Cyprus has signed contracts for weapons orders to bolster its defences at a time of heightened tensions with Turkey over maritime gas deposits, its defence ministry confirmed Friday.

"Contracts were signed related to upgrading specific weapons systems at an estimated cost of 240 million" euros, the ministry said in a statement.

"Given the sensitivity of national security issues, no further details will be made available at present," it said.

A source told AFP the Cypriot army signed a 150 million euro ($165 million) contract in December with European manufacturer MBDA Missile Systems for short-range Mistral surface-to-air missiles.

The information, from a source close to the matter who did not want to be named, corroborated an article in the Tribune, a French financial newspaper.

MBDA also reportedly signed a contract worth 90 million euros for anti-ship Exocet missiles to bolster coastal defences.

Contacted by AFP, MBDA said it did not wish to comment.

Turkey has in recent months sent ships to explore the Exclusive Economic Zone of EU member state Cyprus, despite warnings from Washington and Brussels.

The Mediterranean island is divided between the internationally recognised Republic of Cyprus and a breakaway northern third recognised only by Ankara.

Turkey has had troops stationed in the country since 1974 when it invaded and occupied its northern third after a coup sponsored by the military junta then ruling Greece.

In December, Ankara deployed a military drone in northern Cyprus amid growing regional tensions over a Turkish maritime and security deal with Libya's UN recognised government.

Cyprus, Greece and Israel in early January signed an agreement to build a 2,000-kilometre (1,200-mile) gas pipeline, known as the EastMed project, amid Turkish hostility to the deal.

cc-burs/dwo/dr


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A dispute between companies transporting liquefied petroleum gas across Iraq's northern Kurdish region has escalated into armed attacks and skyrocketing gas prices, government and industry sources said Wednesday. The crisis was sparked by competition over a contract to transport liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) from the northeastern field of Khor Mor to consumers in the autonomous region. "The Golden Jaguar company had for several years been transporting the gas and distributing it by truck," a sou ... read more

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