Turkey hit back at German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday for not criticizing the decision by authorities in Germany to ban rallies in support of expanding President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s powers.
Ankara and Berlin have been locked in acrimony over the last few days after German towns blocked events where Turkish ministers sought to address Turks living there about the April 16 referendum.
Turkish voters will be asked whether to approve constitutional changes to create an executive presidency giving more power to the head of state.
“Mrs Merkel says they (the Germans) respect freedom of expression; the foreign minister says we have no impact on this decision, but if you look carefully at both, they do not criticize the decision” of the German towns, Turkish Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said.
“They do not say the decision taken by the authorities is wrong,” the minister added, speaking to reporters in the central province of Yozgat.
Merkel said on Friday that the decision was “taken by municipalities, and as a matter of principle, we apply freedom of expression in Germany”.
In the run-up to next month’s referendum, trips by Turkish politicians to Germany have come under heavy criticism as the government seeks a “Yes” vote from the huge community of Turkish expatriates.
Bozdag was due to speak at a rally on Thursday in Gaggenau in western Germany but it was cancelled, while Cologne city authorities also withdrew permission for a hall to be used for a speech by Turkish Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekci.
A third town, Frechen on the outskirts of Cologne, scrapped a rally that had been scheduled for Sunday. .
“I ask, not allowing the Turkish justice minister to speak, does it adhere or not to German human rights, Mrs Merkel?” Bozdag asked.
The turmoil in relations between the two countries has been ongoing since Germany criticized the large-scale crackdown on suspected coup-plotters and those alleged to have links to Kurdish militants following last July’s failed coup.
Source: AFP