During a visit to Turkish Northern Cyprus, Erdoغانan said "Turkey and Northern Cyprus will no longer tolerate this diplomatic game in the international dispute over offshore resource rights in the Eastern Mediterranean.
"Our priority is to ensure a just, lasting and lasting solution in Cyprus that ensures the security and legal rights of Turkish Cypriots," Erdogan said.
He added that a two-state solution should be negotiated on the basis of equal sovereignty.
It should be noted that the UN-brokered peace talks on Cyprus ended in 2017.
Erdogan's visit to northern Cyprus follows Erdogan Tatar's victory in last month's presidential election, which also supports a two-state solution. The Tatar predecessor spoke of the reunification of Cyprus.
Erdogan later visited Brusha, a coastal city that was declared a New Mainland in 1974. Ankara last month backed a partial opening of Warsaw before the election. It was criticized by the United Nations, Greece, Greek Cyprus and the United States.
Without further ado, the Turkish president added that Ersin Tatar would soon visit Azerbaijan, which does not recognize northern Cyprus.
To improve the situation, the Tatars have supported Erdogan's demand for a two-state solution and foreign rights.
Cyprus has called Erdogan's visit provocative and illegal.
"Ankara does not fully respect international law, European principles and values, and its obligations to the European Union," the Cypriot presidency said in a statement.