Turkish President Abdullah Gul said there was "no place for authoritarian regimes" in the Mediterranean region, heaping more pressure on the embattled Syrian regime, in comments published Sunday.
"I strongly believe that there is no place any more for authoritarian regimes -- single party systems that do not have accountability or transparency -- on the shores of the Mediterranean," he told Britain's Sunday Telegraph newspaper.
"As someone who has studied in the United Kingdom, lived in the United Kingdom, has this world view, President (Bashar) Assad should be able to understand this."
Gul was to arrive in Britain later Sunday, where he will be undertaking a three-day state visit next week.
Turkey, once a close ally of Syria, has already announced a halt to joint oil exploration with Syria and has threatened to cut electricity exports to its neighbor.
But despite Ankara's protests and the Arab League ultimatum, violence in Syria has shown no sign of abating and Assad has defiantly vowed to fight and die for his country if faced with foreign intervention.
In Sunday's interview, Gul said he had been encouraging his Syrian counterpart to embark on democratic reforms before the uprising.
"We strongly advised him to hurry up and accelerate the pace of reforms," he said.
"Otherwise, if he was not the leader of the change himself, then things would turn out to be too bad, we said to him."
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