The Phnom Penh Post

Dutch expel Turkish minister

- Kareem Fahim

THE Dutch government on Saturday prevented Turkey’s foreign minister from visiting the Netherland­s to address Turkish voters there in a breach of diplomatic protocol that reflected sharply worsening tensions between Turkey and Europe.

The Dutch government said in a statement it had decided to withdraw landing rights for the foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, because of the “risks to public order and security” that a visit by him would pose. Earlier on Saturday, Cavusoglu had warned that Turkey would impose sanctions on the Netherland­s if his flight was cancelled, according to local Turkish media.

Reacting to the cancellati­on, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the Dutch “Nazi remnants” and “fascists” and suggested that Dutch diplomats would be prevented from travelling to Turkey. Late on Saturday, entries and exits at the Dutch Embassy in Ankara and the consulate in Istanbul were closed for security reasons.

The intense diplomatic arguments highlighte­d the heat generated by an upcoming referendum in Turkey on several constituti­onal amendments that could transform its system of government and vastly expand Erdogan’s powers. In the run-up to the vote, set for April 16, several European nations, including the Netherland­s and Germany, have cancelled appearance­s by Turkish ministers supporting Erdogan as the ministers try to sway Turkish voters in the diaspora.

The Turkish campaign coincides with a fraught election season in Europe that has seen a surge in popularity for rightwing, anti-immigratio­n candidates. Nationalis­t or anti-Muslim politician­s such as Geert Wilders in the Netherland­s have called for Turkish politician­s to be barred from campaignin­g in their countries – adding to the pressure on European leaders to accommodat­e such sentiments.

Wilders, whose Freedom Party is expected to be a leading vote-getter in the Dutch election set for Wednesday, ap- peared to relish the spat on Saturday between his government and Turkey’s.

“Oh yes,” he said in a tweet. “I say it to all Turks in the Netherland­s who agree with Erdogan: GO back to Turkey and NEVER come back.”

The breach in relations with the Netherland­s comes as Turkey and Germany are engaged in a similarly bitter dispute that could threaten a European Union deal with Ankara to stem the flow of migrants – a critical issue in Germany, where over 1 million asylum seekers have arrived over the past two years.

As the arguments ramp up, Erdogan could stand to benefit from a perception that European countries have been trying to interfere in Turkey’s election. On Saturday, as news of the foreign minister’s cancelled visit reached Turkey, a hashtag in Turkish caught fire: “Nazipracti­ceinHollan­d.”

 ?? EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP ?? Turkish residents of the Netherland­s gather for a protest in Rotterdam on Saturday. Protests erupted in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam outside the Turkish consulate amid a row with Ankara after Dutch authoritie­s banned the visit of a Turkish minister.
EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP Turkish residents of the Netherland­s gather for a protest in Rotterdam on Saturday. Protests erupted in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam outside the Turkish consulate amid a row with Ankara after Dutch authoritie­s banned the visit of a Turkish minister.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia