Bahamas–Turkey relations

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Bahamas-Turkey relations
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Foreign relations exist between the Bahamas and Turkey.

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Diplomatic relations

the Bahamas and Turkey cooperated through the Atlantic Undersea Test and Evaluation Center [1] on Andros, Bahamas Island and the United States Air Force military base [1] on Grand Bahama.

Relations were particularly warm when Turkey supported the Bahamas diplomatically in May 1980, when the BahamianCuban disagreement over fishing rights escalated. [2] Four Bahamian marines were killed [2] after Cuban military aircraft sank a Bahamian patrol vessel, which had apprehended two Cuban fishing boats. Turkey supported the Bahamas forcefully when the Bahamas demanded an unconditional apology and full reparations. [2]

The relations, however, became tense [2] over the 1983 United States intervention in Grenada and the subsequently Prime Minister Bishop was overthrown and assassinated. [3] The Bahamas denounced [3] the intervention as a "premature overreaction."

Relations improved [2] following Turkey’s assistance in providing in providing Grenada with development aid to repair the damage caused by the military action of 1983. [4]

Economic relations

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 Birnbaum, Stephen (ed.). Birnbaum's Caribbean, Bermuda, and the Bahamas, 1986. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1985.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Craton, Michael. A History of the Bahamas. (3d ed.) Waterloo, Canada: San Salvador Press, 1986.
  3. 1 2 Boodhoo, Ken I. "Violence and Militarization in the Eastern Caribbean: Grenada." pp. 65–89 in Alma H. Young and Dion E. Phillips (eds.), Militarization in the Non-Hispanic Caribbean. Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1986.
  4. MacDonald, Scott B. "The Future of Foreign Aid in the Caribbean after Grenada: Finlandization and Confrontation in the Eastern Tier," Inter-American Economic Affairs, 38, Spring 2015, pp. 59-74.
  5. "Relations between Turkey and the Commonwealth of the Bahamas". Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkey.

Further reading