Archive for the ‘Erdogan’ Category

Dutch Ban Turkish Official From Entry, Erdogan Hits Back …

Supporters of Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan walk to the Dutch consulate in Istanbul on Saturday. Turkey and the Netherlands escalated their spat on Saturday as the Dutch withdrew landing permission for the Turkish foreign minister's plane. Emrah Gurel/AP hide caption

Supporters of Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan walk to the Dutch consulate in Istanbul on Saturday. Turkey and the Netherlands escalated their spat on Saturday as the Dutch withdrew landing permission for the Turkish foreign minister's plane.

Tensions ramped up quickly between Turkey and the Netherlands Saturday, after the Dutch government not only disallowed Turkey's foreign minister from holding a public rally in the country, but revoked his flight permit to even land there.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan fumed about the Dutch government after the news, while speaking to a crowd in Istanbul.

"They are very nervous and cowardly. They are Nazi remnants, they are fascists," Erdogan said, according to The Daily Telegraph.

He also suggested that Turkey may bar Dutch diplomatic flights from landing in his country as retaliation.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte responded to journalists, while he campaigned on Saturday. The Netherlands will hold a national election on March 15.

"It's a crazy remark of course," Rutte said. "I understand they're angry, but this of course was way out of line."

The dust-up began because Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu was planning to hold a rally for Turkish expatriates in support of Erdogan in Rotterham, a city near the coast of southern Holland.

Turkey is holding a referendum vote in April on increasing the president's power, and many expatriates living throughout the European Union still have voting rights. As of 2015, there were about 75,000 Turkish nationals living in the Netherlands.

Officials in Rotterham wanted the Turkish foreign minister to meet with supporters in private because of potential unrest, reports Teri Schultz:

"But even before these negotiations were completed, the Dutch foreign ministry says, (Turkey) started threatening sanctions against the Netherlands, which made it impossible to find a compromise and thus landing rights for Cavusoglu's plane were withdrawn."

In response, Turkey's Family Minister Fatma Betul Sayan Kaya decided to go to Rotterham by road from Germany. She said on Twitter that she was stopped about 100 feet from the Turkish consulate in Rotterham, and prevented from entering the building, according to Reuters.

And Saturday evening, the Dutch Embassy in Ankara and its consulate in Istanbul were closed off by Turkish authorities for security reasons, according to a Turkish foreign ministry official who spoke with the AP through customary anonymity.

Recently, a similar yet milder tension arose between Turkey and Germany as well.

The German government canceled a rally by a Turkish minister citing security reasons, as reported by NPR, and President Erdogan responded by saying the practices were "no different than the Nazi ones of the past."

Erdogan also appeared to threaten the Germans, saying, "If you don't let me in, or if you don't let me speak, I will make the whole world rise up."

In Germany, there are about 1.5 million Turkish expatriates that can vote on the April referendum.

If passed, the referendum would give the Turkish president the ability to impose a state of emergency and to intervene within the judicial system. The referendum would also set a schedule of elections that could allow Erdogan to stay in power until 2029. He first became leader of the country in 2002.

"Yes" voters argue that the new rules would modernize a Turkish constitution that was put in place after a military coup in 1982, reports NPR's Peter Kenyon. "No" supporters say it would give other branches of government very little power to counter the president.

"It [would be] a strong presidency, nothing like any president of the United States has ever experienced," one political scientist, Ersin Kalaycioglu, told Kenyon. "If this amendment carries, then for a while, Turkey will have a system with very little, if any, checks and balances, as far as many of the experts can see."

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Erdogan Calls Dutch ‘Nazi Remnants’ After Turkish Minister Is Barred – New York Times


New York Times
Erdogan Calls Dutch 'Nazi Remnants' After Turkish Minister Is Barred
New York Times
In response, Mr. Erdogan compared the Dutch to fascists and Nazi remnants, echoing the description he used for the Germans last Sunday, after two Turkish politicians scrapped rallies in Germany when the government said their safety could not ...
Dutch police break up pro-Erdogan protestBBC News
Dutch Ban Turkish Official From Entry, Erdogan Hits Back With 'Nazi' CommentNPR
Turkey's Erdogan Calls Dutch `Fascists' After Minister GroundedBloomberg
Telegraph.co.uk -The Guardian
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Erdogan Calls Dutch 'Nazi Remnants' After Turkish Minister Is Barred - New York Times

Erdogan is sympathetic to ISIS and Al-Nusra: Assad – AMN Al-Masdar News (registration)

BEIRUT, LEBANON (10:45 A.M.) Chinas Phoenix TV interviewed Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad on Saturday morning to discuss several topics related to his country and region.

During the interview, the Chinese journalist asked the Syrian President what his thoughts were regarding the trilateral meeting taking place between military officials from the U.S., Turkey, and Russia.

The Syrian President responded that the meeting itself was not objective because there is at least one party, which is Turkey, that is sympathetic to the Islamic State (ISIS).

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Yeah, if you want to link that meeting with ISIS in particular, it wont be objective because at least one party, which is Turkey, has been supporting ISIS till this moment, Assad asserted on Saturday morning.

Because Erdogan, the Turkish President, is Muslim Brotherhood. Hes ideologically linked and sympatheti with ISIS and with Al-Nusra. Everybody knows about this in our region and he helped them either through armaments, logistics, and exporting oil, Assad added.

Tensions between Turkey and Syria were believed to be improved up until recently, when the Turkish Armed Forces carried out sporadic attacks against the Syrian Arab Army in northeast Aleppo.

ALSO READ Kurdish forces liberate more territory en route to Raqqa City

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Erdogan is sympathetic to ISIS and Al-Nusra: Assad - AMN Al-Masdar News (registration)

Court adjourns trial of Erdogan ‘assassins’ to April 24 – Anadolu Agency

MUGLA, Turkey

A local court in southern Turkey adjourned trial of more than 40 suspects alleged to attempt to assassinate President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during the defeated July 2016 coup.

Saturday's hearing was held at Chamber of Commerce and Industry's conference in Mugla province, southwestern Turkey.

The "assassination team" accused of targeting Erdogan was among 44 suspects appearing. They had all been jailed pending trial.

Judge Emirsah Bastog ruled that concrete evidence were available with criminal reports, autopsy papers and footages.

The court rejected the demand for the release of all suspects and adjourned the trial to April 24.

The first hearing was on Feb 20. The suspects have been accused of being part of the "assassination team" targeting Erdogan.

During the night of the coup attempt, two police officers were martyred at the scene of Erdogan's hotel in the port town of Marmaris.

Later that night Erdogan told the nation on live television he had narrowly escaped with his life when the hotel was bombed 15 minutes after he left the premises.

The Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), led by U.S.-based Fetullah Gulen, has been accused of orchestrating the foiled coup attempt. The violence left at least 248 people martyred and around 2,200 others wounded.

The government also accuses the FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through the infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police and judiciary.

Since the coup, operations have been ongoing in the military, police and judiciary, as well as in state institutions across the country, to arrest suspects with alleged links to FETO.

*Reporting by Levent Kisi, Durmu Genc; Writing by Ilker Girit

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Court adjourns trial of Erdogan 'assassins' to April 24 - Anadolu Agency

Erdogan Withdraws From the West – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Erdogan Withdraws From the West
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Recep Tayyip Erdogan wants Turkey out of the West. The Islamist strongman has been telegraphing this since at least 2008. That was when he launched the great purge of the country's secular establishment, and his Justice and Development Party (AKP) ...

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Erdogan Withdraws From the West - Wall Street Journal (subscription)