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Turkey sees int’l influence opportunity in global coronavirus outbreak: report

Turkey is pushing its credentials as a major humanitarian power in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic by sending medical equipment to Italy and Spain, detection kits for Palestinians and even medicines to Armenia, AFP reported.

Turkey is hard hit itself by the virus outbreak, which has killed nearly 1,300 people, but it is still finding the resources to help other countries in need.

In recent weeks Turkey has supplied masks, hazmat suits and hydroalcoholic gel to Italy, Spain and the UK, all among the worst hit in Europe.

Unlike Ankara’s usual interventions, Turkey is now also supporting developed countries — which are more used to helping than being helped.

It is also an opportunity to turn the tables for President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who professes nostalgia for the Ottoman Empire, infamously described as “the sick man of Europe” by Western powers before its collapse at the end of World War I.

To cultivate this idea, each delivery to Europe is carefully staged, from the plane’s take-off broadcast live on television to the beneficiaries’ warm thanks spread across the newspapers.

Erdoğan’s spokesman İbrahim Kalın was quick to point out that “Turkey is the first country in NATO to send help to Spain and Italy,” who are also members of the US-led military alliance.

Ties with the West and Europe in particularly have been strained for several years.

The latest spat with the European Union came earlier this year when Erdoğan said migrants, fleeing conflict in Syria and across the Middle East, would not be prevented from leaving Turkey for Europe, causing huge numbers to gather on the Turkish-Greek border.

Erdoğan insists repeatedly that Europe has not done enough to support EU membership candidate Turkey, which hosts around 3.6 million Syrian refugees.

Relations deteriorated badly as the migrant crisis grew in 2015 and got worse still in 2016 when the EU criticized Erdoğan’s crackdown after a failed coup.

Erdoğan in turn lambasted Brussels for failing to show solidarity with a fellow democratically-elected leader.

“Turkey’s candidacy for the European Union is good for Turkey, but it’s also good for Europe. In fact, this pandemic has proved us right,” Kalın said.

According to Kalın, nearly 100 countries have asked for help from Turkey while Erdogan said on Monday supplies had reached 34 states.

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