Turkey, Germany must rebuild friendship ‘step by step’

Turkey, Germany must rebuild friendship ‘step by step’
German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, 2nd left, talks with his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu, 2nd right, on Wednesday at the entrance of the Adlon Hotel in Berlin. (AFP)
Updated 08 March 2017
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Turkey, Germany must rebuild friendship ‘step by step’

Turkey, Germany must rebuild friendship ‘step by step’

BERLIN: Germany on Wednesday urged Turkey to work toward restoring ties frayed by a series of bitter disputes but warned that any comparison to the Nazi era was a “red line that cannot be crossed.”
NATO allies Ankara and Berlin have been locked in a new row over the past week after several local authorities in Germany blocked rallies by Turkish ministers.
The dispute is the latest in a long list of problems that have plagued relations and comes just after Ankara’s arrest of a journalist for German daily Die Welt that sparked consternation in Berlin.
On Sunday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan raised the stakes when he told a rally in Istanbul that the blocking of public appearances by his ministers was “not different from the Nazi practices of the past.”
German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, after hosting his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu for talks, said he had “made clear that comparisons between the Nazi era and the cancelation of rallies or the rule of law in Germany are unacceptable.”
“Both sides have a responsibility to simply not cross certain red lines, and comparisons to Nazi Germany are one of them,” said Gabriel.
Despite Berlin and Ankara’s deep differences on a host of issues, “there is no alternative to dialogue because that is the only way we can return, step-by-step, to a normal and friendly relationship,” he added.
Ties between Germany and Turkey have been particularly strained since last year’s failed coup aimed at ousting Erdogan.
Berlin has emerged as a strident critic of Ankara’s vast crackdown in the aftermath of the putsch, which has seen more than 100,000 people arrested, suspended or sacked for alleged links to the plotters or to Kurdish militants.
Despite the tensions, Turkish ministers have been seeking to make campaign appearances in Germany ahead of an April referendum on expanding Erdogan’s powers.
The ministers are particularly anxious to tap into Germany’s Turkish community with its 1.4 million people who are eligible to vote — the fourth largest electoral base after Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir.
Cavusoglu had himself traveled to Germany on Monday evening to address some 200 supporters at the residence of the Turkish consul in the northern city of Hamburg.
“Please, don’t give us lessons in human rights and democracy,” the minister said, accusing Germany of failing to practice what it preached in reference to the scrapped rallies.
Earlier, during lunch with foreign envoys, the Turkish minister said the cancelations were “unacceptable” and reminiscent of practices in the run-up to World War II.
With the bad-tempered row showing no signs of abating, Gabriel has sought to prevent an ‘us-versus-them’ sentiment from building up among Turks in Germany.
In a special message to the community, Gabriel said: “When there are political differences, Germany must not allow political disputes to be imported from Turkey.”
Immigrants “from Turkey have played an incredible part in building prosperity in our country,” he said.
“Much of what we have today would not have been possible without the help of Turkish workers or companies,” said Gabriel.