Kazakhstan Summit: Erdogan met Putin today
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin met on the sidelines of a regional summit in Kazakhstan.
An official ceremony was held on Wednesday to welcome the president of Turkey to Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan. To discuss bilateral relations and global challenges, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Kazakh counterpart Kassym-Jomart Tokayev have inter-delegation sessions and one-on-one discussions.
In order to strengthen relations in the areas of politics, economy, culture, and defence, the presidents also co-chaired the fourth meeting of the Türkiye-Kazakhstan High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council. This was followed by a joint press conference. Erdogan stated that the Turkish world must maintain close cooperation and bolster its solidarity in light of regional and international developments prior to the high-level summit.
The security, stability, territorial integrity, and prosperity of Kazakhstan are very important to me, he continued. Erdogan added that six agreements will be signed between Turkey and Kazakhstan to strengthen ties.
In 1992, Turkey was the first nation to recognise Kazakhstan’s independence. Erdogan will attend the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia summit on Thursday while in Astana (CICA).
Political, economic, humanitarian, and environmental issues, as well as brand-new difficulties and dangers, will be covered during the two-day conference. Erdogan is anticipated to have private discussions with summit participants, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, on the margins of the gathering.
Kazakhstan Summit: Erdogan met Putin today
Aibek Smadiyarov, a spokesman for the Kazakh foreign ministry, announced on Monday that 11 heads of state, including those from Palestine and Azerbaijan, will attend the conference.
CICA, a multi-national forum with an emphasis on Asia that was founded in 1992, has 27 member governments as well as more than 10 other nations and intergovernmental organisations who have observer status