Germany urges calm in ‘Nazi’ row with Turkey

Germany urges calm in ‘Nazi’ row with Turkey
German Chancellor Angela Merkel grabs the hand of a triplet baby girl as she visits the Bosch Foundation to mark the 15th anniversary of the social organisation “wellcome” in Berlin on Monday. (Reuters)
Updated 07 March 2017
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Germany urges calm in ‘Nazi’ row with Turkey

Germany urges calm in ‘Nazi’ row with Turkey

BERLIN: Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday called for calm in an escalating row with Turkey, a day after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan labelled a German ban on rallies by his ministers “Nazi practices.”
While firmly rejecting Erdogan’s claims as “absurd and out of place,” Merkel’s office sought to draw a line under a dispute that is further fraying ties between the two countries.
“To our Turkish partners, let us talk openly and critically, but let us remember the special meaning of our close relationship and let cool heads prevail,” Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert said.
Sharply rejecting Erdogan’s Nazi jibe, Seibert said: “Nazi comparisons are always absurd and out of place, because they lead only to one thing — the trivialising of the crimes against humanity committed by the Nazis.”
The row erupted late last week after three local German authorities banned the Turkish ministers’ scheduled appearances ahead of an April referendum on a plan to scrap the prime minister post in Turkey, thereby boosting Erdogan’s powers.
The German authorities cited capacity problems in hosting the events, which they said were likely to attract large crowds.
Merkel has said her government did not have a hand in the decisions, which fell under the jurisdiction of local officials.
But Ankara responded with fury to the cancelations, accusing Berlin of working against the referendum.
On Sunday, Erdogan told a rally in Istanbul: “Germany, you are not even close to democracy. Your practices are not different from the Nazi practices of the past.” He also warned Germany not to hinder him from making an appearance if he wished.
“If you don’t let me in, or if you don’t let me speak, I will make the whole world rise up,” he said.
Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu pressed the attack on Monday, accusing Berlin of working to scupper the rallies.
“The hotels, the conference halls are being put under pressure, police are being sent to the owners of these places: It’s systematic pressure, a maneuver aimed at erecting systematic barriers,” he said.
“The state and the state-run institutions are all implicated. That’s unacceptable. As for us, we will take the necessary measures, we have no fear of anyone,” said Cavusoglu, who is due to make a campaign appearance in Hamburg on Tuesday.
He will also meet his German counterpart, Sigmar Gabriel, on Wednesday in Berlin.
Germany is home to the biggest population of Turkish people abroad with about three million people of Turkish origin, the legacy of an extensive “guest worker” program mainly in the 1960s and 70s.
With some 1.4 million Turks in Germany holding the right to vote in Turkey, it is not uncommon to see politicians traveling there from Ankara to try to sway voters.
Undeterred by the cancelations last week, Turkish Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekci made a campaign appearance in Cologne on Sunday.
Seibert, the government spokesman, repeated Merkel’s stance that campaign rallies by Turkish ministers, in general, should not be banned.
“Yes, rallies are possible within rules and regulations,” he said.
Ties between Ankara and Berlin have been strained by a series of disputes, particularly since the failed coup against Erdogan in July.
Berlin has emerged as a strident critic of Ankara’s crackdown in the aftermath of the failed putsch, which has seen more than 100,000 people arrested or dismissed from their posts over alleged links to the plotters or to Kurdish militants.
Given the significant Turkish and Kurdish populations in Germany, Berlin is anxious to prevent Turkish domestic disputes from spilling into the country.
Most recently, Ankara’s arrest of Deniz Yucel, a Turkish-German dual national who is a correspondent for Germany’s Die Welt newspaper, has sparked an outcry in Berlin.
An Istanbul court has charged Yucel with spreading terrorist propaganda and inciting hatred.
Gabriel has said the case will make “everything harder” for Turkish-German relations.