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Germany Turkey: 30000 Kurds in Frankfurt anti-Erdogan protest – BBC News


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Germany Turkey: 30000 Kurds in Frankfurt anti-Erdogan protest
BBC News
Some 30,000 Turkish Kurds have held a demonstration in the German city of Frankfurt against the Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Protesters came from all over Germany ahead of Kurdish new year celebrations. They called for democracy and a No ...
Erdogan Aide: Germany Supports Cleric Behind Coup AttemptVoice of America
Kurdish Supporters in Frankfurt Protest Against ErdoganU.S. News & World Report
Another Turkish rally possible in Germany before referendum, Erdogan spokesman saysReuters
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Germany Turkey: 30000 Kurds in Frankfurt anti-Erdogan protest - BBC News

Turkey’s referendum campaign unfair, Erdogan opponents say – The Seattle Times

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) Opposition figures in Turkey say they have faced threats, violence, arbitrary detentions, a lack of TV airtime and even sabotage in the campaign for a referendum on expanding the presidents powers.

The complaints come even as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan himself has slammed European countries for not letting his ministers campaign on their soil for the April 16 vote on giving his office more power.

Politicians campaigning against the constitutional changes proposed by Erdogan also say the state of emergency in Turkey since a failed coup attempt in July prevents them from getting their message out ahead of the vote.

Those who advocate for a no vote are faced with a series of obstructions, said Utku Cakirozer, a former journalist who is now a lawmaker for the opposition Republican Peoples Party, or CHP.

While he, too, criticized moves by Germany and the Netherlands to stop Turkish ministers from campaigning to Turkish citizens abroad, Cakirozer said our democracy bar has been lowered a great deal and needs to be raised rapidly.

At stake are changes that would usher in an executive presidential system, merging the powers of the prime minister and the president. Erdogan argues that a strong presidency will make Turkey better equipped to deal with economic and security challenges.

Critics say it would give Erdogan too much control and further erode the democratic separation of powers in the country.

With opinion polls suggesting the outcome of the tight race could be determined by yet-undecided voters, no campaigners say they face an uphill battle because Turkeys TV channels are either pro-government or refrain from broadcasts critical of the government for fear of reprisals.

Erdogan and members of the government have dominated the airwaves, holding twice-daily campaign speeches that are televised live in their entirety on all channels. Inauguration ceremonies and state-funded official trips also frequently turn into yes campaign events.

Meanwhile, the pro-government media largely ignore campaign rallies by the no camp. Even state-owned media, which is obliged to be neutral, cuts away early from speeches delivered by CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu.

Ibrahim Kalin, Erdogans spokesman, disputed claims of an uneven playing field, saying the opposition was allowed to campaign freely.

Just because the president and the prime ministers rallies attract more numbers and it looks like only yes campaigning, thats not true. Its a misperception, he told journalists last week.

The CHP says it has counted more than 100 incidents of obstructions to the no camp, ranging from physical assaults and death threats to detentions by police.

Sinan Ogan, a no campaigner who broke away from a nationalist party that backs Erdogan, was interrupted in mid-speech this month at a university in Istanbul by a man who ran on the stage and knocked down the podium, sparking scuffles in the hall.

Its either our electricity cut (during rallies) or leaflets torn apart, or (the rally venue) is being restored at the last moment, or the podium is attacked, or there is an interruption attempt so that we cannot speak, he told The Associated Press. And even if you do speak, no TV station will air it.

His political ally, Meral Aksener, was forced to hold a campaign event in the dark after the electricity at her venue in the city of Canakkale was cut off.

Erdogan, who called the Dutch and German governments Nazis and fascists for barring Turkish ministers from campaigning in those countries, has said those who oppose the constitutional changes include terrorists and coup-plotters.

That is why I believe my citizens, my brothers, will vote yes,' he said.

Turkeys state of emergency allows the government to rule by decree and to suppress demonstrations and gatherings. Some 41,000 people have been arrested and tens of thousands of others dismissed from public sector jobs for alleged links to the coup attempt or alleged ties to terror groups.

Those in jail include some 150 journalists and a dozen legislators from Turkeys pro-Kurdish party, which also opposes the constitutional changes.

A decree issued under the emergency powers has eliminated the High Electoral Boards ability to slap fines on TV stations that dont devote equal campaign time to opposing sides.

During a visit to Ankara last month, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for election observers to be allowed to monitor the vote. European institutions have also expressed concerns over the campaign process, including the restrictions on the freedom of expression and the right to assembly.

If a constitutional referendum must absolutely be held during a state of emergency, restrictions on political freedoms have to be lifted, the Venice Commission, a legal advisory body of the Strasbourg, France-based Council of Europe, said in a recent report. If the restrictions may not be repealed, the constitutional referendum should be postponed until after the state of emergency.

The Sozcu newspaper, one of the few remaining outlets critical of the government, said in a front-page article Wednesday that what the Netherlands did was wrong, but questioned what was going on at home.

The countrys system of governance is changing but those who say no are given no space to breathe, it wrote.

___

Associated Press writer Mehmet Guzel contributed from Istanbul.

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Turkey's referendum campaign unfair, Erdogan opponents say - The Seattle Times

How Erdoan’s ruthless drive for more power is shaking a divided … – The Guardian

Supporters of Recep Tayyip Erdogan at a rally in Kelsterbach near Frankfurt am Main. There 1,4 million people in Germany eligible to vote in Turkeys referendum in April. Photograph: Boris Roessler/AFP/Getty Images

The ruthless drive by Recep Tayyip Erdoan, Turkeys pugnacious president, to expand his already considerable executive powers knows no bounds. Even cows are not safe. At the height of last weeks furious row with the Netherlands, Turkeys red-meat producers association said it was expelling 40 Holstein Friesian cattle. Dutch cows, like Dutch diplomats, were no longer welcome in Turkey.

If the political backdrop were not so deadly serious, the bovine ban might be funny. But Erdoans rude push to take partisan campaigning in Turkeys fraught 16 April referendum on expanded presidential powers to the doorsteps of western Europes four-million-strong Turkish diaspora is no laughing matter. It has sparked an all-out crisis in Turkey-Europe relations that had been threatening to erupt for years.

When the Dutch banned unsanctioned ministerial rallies and cracked down on Turkish demonstrators, Erdoan denounced them as modern-day Nazis. When Germany, where 1.4 million ethnic Turks have a vote in Erdoans referendum, took a similar stance, he accused Angela Merkel, Germanys chancellor, of Islamophobia and harbouring terrorists. Denmark, Austria and Switzerland, which also have sizeable Turkish minorities, have all been caught up in the furore.

This jagged, ugly confrontation should come as no surprise. It has long been simmering, in particular since elections in 2015 when Erdoans ruling Justice and Development party (AKP) unexpectedly lost its parliamentary majority. The pro-Kurdish Peoples Democratic party (HDP) made historic gains, winning seats for the first time a result enthusiastically welcomed by EU countries.

In response, Erdoan began a fierce crackdown on political and media opponents while deliberately abandoning the 2013 ceasefire with PKK Kurdish separatists. Renewed security-forces repression in the Kurdish-dominated south-east caused numerous casualties and wrought dreadful destruction in Kurdish cities. This violence continues, as the UN made plain in a damning report this month. It is cynically perpetuated by Erdoan to bolster his claim that only he and the AKP can save Turkey from terrorists and foreign co-conspirators.

Last years failed Turkish army coup, provoked by Erdoans autocratic behaviour and a series of devastating terror bombings, accelerated this process of internal polarisation in a country where polls suggest an almost exact 50-50 split for and against the president. Erdoan blamed the coup on a US-backed conspiracy led by the exiled cleric, Fethullah Glen. But he also lambasted Europe for being too slow to support him and too quick to criticise post-coup repression.

Erdoan has persisted with his divisive, Trump-like for us or against us tactics in the run-up to the referendum, denouncing the HDP and other opposition parties as terrorist sympathisers, arresting their leaders and detaining and persecuting independent civil servants, media, academics, police and judges in their thousands.

Erdoans tactics are as simple as they are crude. His demand for quasi-dictatorial powers rests on the claim that he, and he alone, is the saviour of the Turkish republic. Since 2003, when he first became prime minister, his brand of neo-Islamist nationalism has gradually become more extreme and exclusive. He plays on Turks historical fears of foreign meddling. He cynically brandishes the religion card, pitting Muslim Turkey against Christendom. And with the Obama administration gone, Europe and the EU have become his preferred whipping boy.

Erdoan taunted Christian Europe again last Thursday while campaigning in Sakarya, condemning the European Court of Justices ruling that allows companies to ban staff wearing visible religious symbols such as head scarves. Where is the liberty of religion? he demanded. They have commenced a struggle between the cross and crescent I am saying this clearly: Europe is heading towards the days just before the second world war.

Erdoan also mocked Mark Rutte, the Dutch prime minister who won last weeks general election, seeing off a challenge from the far-right Islamophobe, Geert Wilders. Oh Rutte! You may have been first in the elections, but you have lost a friend like Turkey, Erdoan said. Give it up. You have lost. Erdoans surrogates continue to indulge in similar diatribes. Europe was entering an era of religious warfare, said foreign minister Mevlt avuolu. Now the election is over in the Netherlands when you look at the many parties you see there is no difference between the social democrats and fascist [Geert] Wilders. All have the same mentality Where are you taking Europe? You have begun to collapse, Europe Holy wars will soon begin in Europe, he said.

Rhetoric and schadenfreude aside, the causes of Turkish anger are deep-seated and not wholly unjustified. Erdoan has repeatedly complained that Turkeys longstanding EU membership bid, now widely viewed as dead in the water, was, in effect, humiliatingly blocked by France and Germany a decade ago. He now says Turkey does not need the EU anyway.

Erdoan is incensed that visa-free travel for Turks in Europe has not materialised, despite promises made in a deal with Merkel in 2015 on halting Syrian refugee flows. On Friday, Turkeys interior minister rejected a more limited readmission arrangement and challenged the EU to face the consequences of scrapping the refugee pact. Im telling you Europe, do you have that courage? If you want, well send the 15,000 refugees to you that we dont send each month and blow your mind, Sleyman Soylu said.

Erdoans grievances include European criticism of human rights abuses, his treatment of Kurds, and recent attacks on media freedoms, including the detention of a journalist working for the German newspaper, Die Welt. But it seems plain that, with next months referendum result expected to be close, Erdoan is reaching indiscriminately for any ammunition he can find to boost his hardline nationalist-chauvinist-conspiracy narrative.

The view from the other side of the Europe-Turkey confrontation is unedifying, too. Traumatised by Brexit, shocked by the advent of Donald Trump, weakened by eurozone crises and alarmed by neo-populist forces that threaten the centrist establishment in coming elections in France and Germany, the European commission and principal EU members are poorly placed to resist the challenges presented by a tough, unscrupulous opponent such as Erdoan.

For years, the Europeans condescended to or ignored Ankara in the complacent belief that Turkey, a developing country and Nato member with a secular, western outlook, needed the EU more than the other way around. Now the tables are turned. Despite a recent slump, Turkey is growing fast, economically and demographically. Secularism is in retreat. In strategic terms, Erdoan is closer to Vladimir Putin than he is to Merkel (or Trump).

In Syria, Erdoan is allied with the Russians and Iran and at odds with the US over its backing for Syrias Kurds. When it comes to Islamic State, and fighting jihadi terrorism in general, Erdoan has proved unreliable, to put it kindly. Meanwhile, his race and religion-based messages invite a response in kind from Europes hard-right extremists and demagogues, for whom such divisions are grist to the mill.

Responding to Erdoan and his ministers last week, Merkel and Franois Hollande, the French president, said their insults were unacceptable and must cease. But their position is shaky. Given their neediness over refugees and counter-terrorism, they have few options by way of retaliation. In terms of the overall relationship, Europe has lost the initiative and the upper hand it took for granted for so long. As Erdoans allies say, who now is the sick man of Europe?

Europe must stop lecturing Turkey, foreign minister avuolu crowed last week, for one simple reason: It is Turkey that commands. Such claims overstate the case. But there is no denying the forces of xenophobic, anti-democratic, intolerant ultra-nationalism, symbolised by Erdoan, are once again at the gates of Europe and, notwithstanding the Dutch election result, nobody has yet produced a convincing riposte.

On 16 April, Turks will be asked to vote on a plan that would transform a parliamentary system in the country to an executive presidency. A Yes vote would give President Recep Tayyip Erdoan sweeping new powers and allow him to govern as head of state until 2029. Under the changes, a president would be given powers to appoint ministers, choose most top judges and enact certain laws by decree. The president could also announce a state of emergency and dismiss parliament.

Erdoan, right, has staked everything on winning the referendum. His supporters say that, when Turkey is at increased risk of terrorist attacks, the new system will streamline decision-making and give greater stability. Opponents fear it will usher in an era of authoritarian one-man rule when judicial independence and press freedom have already been curtailed.

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How Erdoan's ruthless drive for more power is shaking a divided ... - The Guardian

Why Turkish President Recep Erdogan is still the world’s best Nazi – Canada Free Press

Bombthrowers:

After their little hatefest in the Netherlands climaxed with riots, shouts of Allahu Akbar and anti-Semitic slurs, Turkeys tyrant, an Islamist named Erdogan, who has more political prisoners than research scientists, decided to call the Dutch, Nazis.

Since its 2017, that involved lots of Twitter trolling and assorted public tantrums. Theres one problem though. If you had to pick a Nazish dictator, it would be Erdogan.

Lets consider the Hitler points in Erdogans favor.

Islamists, including some of Erdogans Muslim Brotherhood pals, are usually big fans of Hitler. Erdogan ought to just go ahead and embrace his Hitler image. He certainly isnt going to convince anyone outside his mad bigoted Islamist mobs of supporters in Europe, who live off the public dole while cheering the return of the Ottoman Empire, that the liberal governments he hates are Hitler.

There was even the time he modeled his new regime on Hitler.

Turkeys controversial President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sparked mockery and condemnation by defending new powers he wants to give himself as being similar to Adolf Hitlers.

In a statement that surprised even his critics, Mr Erdogan responded to arguments that putting political power in the hands of the presidency would not work in a unitary state.

He said there were other examples of its being successful. There are already examples in the world, he said.

You can see it when you look at Hitlers Germany. There are later examples in various other countries.

This article first appeared at FrontPageMag.

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Why Turkish President Recep Erdogan is still the world's best Nazi - Canada Free Press

Erdogan accuses EU of ‘crusade’ against Islam – Deutsche Welle

In a speech given to supporters in the western Turkish city of Sakarya, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan invoked the medieval religious wars between Christian Europeand the Islamic Middle Eastin the context ofpresent-day escalating tensions between the European Union and Turkey.

"My dear brothers, a battle has started between the cross and the half moon. There can be no other explanation," Erdogansaid on Thursday.

The Turkish presidentalso stated the European Court of Justice's (ECJ) Tuesday ruling, whichpermits companies to ban the Islamic headscarf as part of policies barring religious symbols inthe workplace, was the start of a "crusade" by Europe.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly accused Dutch and German politicians of acting like "Nazis" and claiming the "spirit of fascism" is rampant in Europe. He later invoked medieval religious wars in the context of escalating tensions between the EU and Turkey. "My dear brothers, a battle has started between the cross and the half moon. There can be no other explanation," Erdogan said.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, meanwhile, was not to be outdown by his boss. Speaking on Thursday, Cavusoglu said Europe was losing its unity. "Religious wars will soon begin inEurope... If things continue as they are, then it will be so." "You will learn how to behave towards us. If you do not learn, we will teach you."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel welcomed the election victory for the center-right prime minister Mark Rutte in divisive Dutch elections. "I was very happy that a high turnout led to a very pro-European result, a clear signal," she said. "I don't intend to participate in this race to trade provocations." Referring to Erdogan's attacks, she added: "The insults need to stop."

Meanwhile, Germany's Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said Ankara was playing the victim with its attacks on its NATO allies to galvanize support ahead of its referendum in April. Turkish politicians had "no business" campaigning in Germany, he said. France and Germany plan to establish a European center to counter extremist propaganda and deradicalize young people, he also revealed this week.

After a week of heightened tensions between Turkey and the Netherlands, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte emerged victorious in a bruising battle with Geert Wilders. The populist's invective against all things Muslim and anything from the EU failed to earn him the breakthrough that many had come to count on as a given.

French President Francois Hollande congratulated Rutte for his election success and his "victory against extremism." He said that "the values of openness, respect for others, and a faith in Europe's future are the only true response to the nationalist impulses and isolationism that are shaking the world." In a joint statement with Angela Merkel, he denounced Erdogan's remarks as "unacceptable."

After boosts in Britain and the United States over the past year and Wednesday's setback in the Netherlands, populism now heads to France for its next test of political viability. Now it is for Marine Le Pen of the National Front to carry the torch in presidential elections starting next month.

Meanwhile, Germany's far-right kept on message. "I can not hide the fact that we wanted Wilders to have had a better result," the leader of the populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) Frauke Petry said. "Wilders addressed the right issues in the election campaign, but he might not always have had the right tone. Citizens want a clear message, but they are afraid of a hard tone," Petry said.

Konstantin Kosachev, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the Russian parliament, wrote that Europe had been "weakened" by the elections in the Netherlands. "French Presidential candidate Emmanuel Macron and Merkel may breathe for the time being after the victory of Rutte, but the fear among the established European elites facing the challenges of the 21st century remains palpable," he wrote.

Erdogan has recently upped his antagonistic rhetoric towards Europe after Germany and the Netherlands both canceled campaign appearances by Turkish politicians. The events were intended to drum up support for an April 16 referendum that, if approved, would vastly expandErdogan's presidentialpowers.

Erdogan has repeatedly compared the behavior of German and Dutch politicians to that of "Nazis" and accused Europe of hosting the "spirit of fascism."

"Europe is swiftly rolling back to the days before World War II," he said in his speech in Sakarya.

Post-election attacks on the Netherlands

Erdogan and Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu also took aim at the Netherlands on Thursdaydespite the previous day's election result, in which Dutch voters rejected right-wing populist Geert Wilders and his Islamophobic and anti-immigration platform.

"Hey Rutte! You may have emerged as the number one party in the election but you must know that you have lost Turkey as your friend," Erdogan said in his televised speech.

Many analysts believe Rutte's hardline approach to prohibiting Turkish politicians from campaigning in the Netherlands helped him gain the support of undecided voters who buoyed him to victory over Wilders.

Despite Turkey'sprevious criticism of the virulently anti-IslamWilders, Cavusoglu told a Turkish broadcaster on Thursday that there was "no difference" between the liberal Rutte and "fascist" Wilders.

The antagonistic rhetoric and authoritarian power expansions, as well as Ankara's threats to suspend the 2016 migration agreement with the EU, has thrown the EUneighbor's long-standing bid forentry into the bloc into question.

However, Cavusoglu later said in a different interview that "no reason" existed for Turkey to "move away from Europe."

Erdogan and Merkel have butted heads over Turkish campaign appearances in Germany

Merkel: 'The insults need to stop'

For her part, German Chancellor Angela Merkel denounced Erdogan's latest round of accusations. The Turkish president accused Merkel this week of supporting terrorists in theanti-Erdogan Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

"I don't intend to participate in this race to trade provocations," she told the German regional newspaper "Saarbrcker Zeitung."

"The insults need to stop," she added in comments printed in the paper's Friday edition, referencing Turkey's Nazi comparisons aimed at the Netherlands.

Merkel stated that Turkish political leaders are permitted to appear in the country under certain conditions: they must disclose who willappear and for what goal, and the foreign politicians must abide by Germany's laws and constitutional principles.

"We do not give anyone a carte blanche for the future," she added.

The chancellor's comments came the same day the city of Hannover scrapped a Friday rally organized by the Union of European Turkish Democrats (UETD) at which a senior Erdogan government official was set to appear.

The last-minute cancellation indicates tempers could get hotter and the Turkish-German relationship perhaps even cooler.

cmb/sms (AFP, dpa, Reuters)

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Erdogan accuses EU of 'crusade' against Islam - Deutsche Welle