Latvia–Turkey relations
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Latvia–Turkey relations are the foreign relations between Latvia and Turkey. Both countries are members of NATO and the Council of Europe. Latvia is an EU member and Turkey is an EU candidate. Latvia supports Accession of Turkey to the EU, although negotiations have now been suspended.
History
- Turkey recognized the independence of Latvia in 1925.[2][3]
- Following the USSR annexation of Latvia in August 1940, Turkey closed its consulate in Riga– in tandem with the United States– on September 5, 1940. Despite the closure of the consulate, Turkey never recognized the Latvia's annexation and continued diplomatic relations with Latvia and Estonia by conferring diplomatic status on the diplomats that were accredited by the previous Latvian government.[citation needed]
- Turkey recognized the restoration of Latvia's independence on September 3, 1991.[2]
High level visits
| Guest | Host | Place of visit | Date of visit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Çankaya Köşkü, Ankara | April 16–17, 2014[4] | ||
| Riga Castle, Riga | October 22–23, 2014[4] | ||
| Riga Castle, Riga | May 16, 2019[4] | ||
| Ankara | August 16, 2022[5] | ||
Economic relations
Trade volume between the two countries was 398 million USD in 2016 (Turkish exports/imports: 196/202 million USD).[4]