The Asian Age

Do you want a Mercedes C-class? Kill dictatorsh­ip

Turkey protests installati­on in Berlin offering car as prize for killing its President

-

Istanbul, July 5: Turkey protested officially to Germany on Wednesday that an artist had been allowed to set up an installati­on in central Berlin offering a car as a prize in exchange for killing world leaders including President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The installati­on was set up outside the offices of Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Monday, comprising a Mercedes C-class car and banners with pictures of Erdogan, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi King Salman. “Do you want this car? Kill dictatorsh­ip!” said the slogan.

Mr Erdogan is frequently accused by opponents of acting like a dictator, although he rubbishes the idea, noting that he is the first directly-elected president in Turkish history.

The action was staged by the art collective Centre for Political Beauty led by Phillip Ruch, which has made several stunts in the past including displaying four tigers in the centre of Berlin to protest at refugee policy. “We strongly condemn the installati­on in front of the federal chanceller­y in Berlin,” Turkey’s foreign ministry said in a statement. “The banner is a direct incitement to violence,” the foreign ministry added, calling on the German authoritie­s to “take the necessary action” to remedy the situation.

The ministry added that it had transmitte­d Turkey’s anger to the German embassy in Ankara and sent an urgent note to the German foreign ministry in Berlin.

Turkey’s embassy to Berlin said it was “incomprehe­nsible and unacceptab­le” that Ruch had been allowed to set up such an installati­on with no interventi­on from the local security forces.

“It is clear that in such a sensitive time when communal peace and shared values need to be protected, these kinds of actions encouragin­g hatred and violence will not serve peace,” the embassy said in a statement.

All three leaders targeted in the stunt were due to attend the G20 summit in Hamburg this Friday and Saturday although King Salman has now cancelled his trip. Turkey-German relations are going through a rocky period with Berlin stepping up its criticism of Ankara’s rights record under Erdogan.

In another incident, Turkish police at the weekend said they had seized from a hotel room in the centre of Istanbul a machine that was printing and distributi­ng antiErdoga­n pamphlets onto the street below.

Turkey ‘strongly condemned’ an artist who had been allowed to set up an installati­on outside Merkel’s office offering a car as a prize in exchange for killing world leaders including Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Turkish embassy sent a note to German foreign ministry saying it was ‘incomprehe­nsible and unacceptab­le’

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India