Turkey said Saturday that a Russian Su-34 warplane has violated its airspace for the second time despite several warnings.
A Foreign Ministry statement on Saturday said that a Russian SU-34 crossed into Turkish airspace from Syria on Friday, ignoring several warnings that were delivered both in Russian and in English by Turkish radar units. It said Ankara summoned the Russian ambassador to the ministry Friday evening to "strongly protest" the violation, AP reported.
"This violation is a concrete indication of Russian's acts aiming to escalate problems, despite the clear warning by our country and by NATO," the statement read. "We openly and clearly call on Russia to act responsibly so that the Turkish air space, which is a NATO airspace, is not violated."
"We emphasize once again the fact that Russia will be held responsible for any dire consequences which can emerge from such irresponsible acts," the statement said.
In November, Turkey shot down a Russian plane which violated its airspace near Syria, straining the previously close ties between the two countries.
Turkey shot down the Russian Su-24 bomber near the border with Syria on Nov. 24, saying it violated its airspace for 17 seconds despite repeated warnings. Russia insists the plane never entered Turkish airspace. One pilot and a Russian marine of the rescue party were killed in the incident.