Greece said on Friday it was expelling Libya’s ambassador to the country, angered at an accord between Libya and Turkey signed on November 27 that maps out a sea boundary between the two countries close to the Greek island of Crete.



Mohamed Younis AB Menfi had 72 hours to leave the country, Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias told a news briefing. Dendias called the Turkey-Libyan accord a “blatant violation of international law.”



The move did not mean Greece was severing diplomatic relations with Libya, Dendias said.



The expulsion is the latest twist in a saga of Mediterranean states jostling to claim yet-untapped oil and gas in the region.



Turkey and the internationally-recognized government of Libya signed the accord defining their boundaries and a deal on expanded security and military cooperation, a step Turkey said was protecting its rights.



Greece immediately shot back, calling the accord absurd because it ignored the presence of Crete between the coasts of Turkey and Libya.



Greece and Turkey are at odds over a host of issues ranging from mineral rights in the Aegean Sea to ethnically-split Cyprus. Tensions are also running high because of Turkish drilling off Cyprus, and the European Union has prepared sanctions against Turkey in response.



On Thursday, Cyprus said it was petitioning the International Court of Justice to safeguard its offshore rights. [Reuters]