Germany to Turkey’s President Erdogan: Your bodyguards not welcome at G20 – USA TODAY

Alistair Walsh, Deutsche Welle Published 4:28 a.m. ET June 26, 2017 | Updated 6 hours ago

A dozen Turkish security guards will face charges for attacking protesters outside the Turkish Embassy during President Erdogan's visit. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

Police secure the street outside the Turkish Embassy during a visit by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on May 16, 2017, in Washington.(Photo: Dave Clark, AFP/Getty Images)

Germany's foreign ministry warned Turkish bodyguards involved in violent scuffles in Washington last month not to attend the G20 summit in July, German media reportedon Sunday.

Those warnings were then repeated to Bundestag (Germany's Parliament) members in closed-door meetings, respected national daily Die Welt reported.

The Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) said earlier that foreign powers did not hold sovereign powers, saying "foreign colleagues only have the right to self-defense," the paper reported.

Hamburg Senator Andy Grote told Die Welt: "On our streets, only the Hamburg police have a say and no one else. This includes foreign security forces."

The Turkish Embassy sent the foreign ministry a list of 50 people who were to accompany President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to Hamburg, local daily Hamburger Abendblatt reported on Sunday. The list reportedly included several agents who were involved in an incident in Washington last month.

Erdogan's guards beat protestors

In May, Erdogan's bodyguards allegedly pushed past U.S. police to attack supporters of a Kurdish group following a meeting with President Trump in Washington.

Videos posted to social media showed a group of men in suits punching and kicking protesters, including a woman lying down, while police struggled to stop the violence.

U.S. authorities announced arrest warrants had been issued for 12 members of Erdogan's security detail, including nine security guards and three police officers.

Turkeys foreign ministry lodged a formal protest with the U.S. ambassador for the "aggressive" actions of U.S. security personnel. It released a statement criticizing "the inability of U.S. authorities to take sufficient precautions at every stage of the official program" and demanded a full investigation of the incident.

Last year Erdogan's bodyguards also attacked a group outside the Brookings Institution, ejecting a Turkish reporter from the speech venue, kicking another and throwing a third to the ground outside the prominent think tank.

Protests planned for Hamburg

More than 10,000 left-wing extremists are expected to descend on Hamburg for the G20 Summit being held on July 7 and July 8. Hamburg is already a hotbed of left-wing activism and cars have been regularly torched in the lead up to the summit.

Adding to the possibility of potential violence is the large Kurdish presence in the Hanseatic city, many of whom support the banned Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK). Several thousand well-organized Turkish right-wing extremists such as the Ulkucu or Gray Wolf movement reportedly operate in Germany as well.

"The Kurdish scene is highly hierarchical, and does not need a long lead time to mobilize," a senior security official told Hamburger Abendblatt.

Germany's domestic intelligence agency (BfV) warned Die Welt that street battles between Kurds and nationalist Turks could easily erupt.

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This article originally appeared on Deutsche Welle. Its content was created separately to USA TODAY.

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