Kuwait Times

Turkey accuses Berlin of working against Erdogan powers referendum

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Tensions between Turkey and Germany soared yesterday as Ankara accused Berlin of working for a ‘No’ vote in a referendum on Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s powers and a German town received a bomb threat after blocking a Turkish rally. The Turkish public will vote on April 16 on whether to create a presidenti­al system which Ankara says will be like that in France or the United States and ensure political stability.

But critics say the system will further weaken parliament and herald one-man rule by Erdogan, Turkey’s strongman president. Ahead of the referendum, Turkish politician­s’ trips to Germany have sparked controvers­y, notably a rally by Prime Minister Binali Yildirim in the western city of Oberhausen to garner support for a ‘Yes’ vote. And on Thursday, several local authoritie­s blocked rallies by two more Turkish ministers, prompting a furious response from Ankara which promptly summoned the German envoy to protest.

“They don’t want Turkey to campaign here, they are working for a ‘No’,” Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told reporters in the Turkish capital yesterday. “They want to get in the way of a strong Turkey.” Vienna has also said it would not allow any campaign-related events. Tensions with Berlin have also increased over Ankara’s provisiona­l detention of a German journalist on terror-related charges on Monday.

Bomb threat

As the political fallout continued, the western German town of Gaggenau which cancelled a rally by Turkish Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said it received a bomb threat early yesterday. “The caller cited the cancellati­on of the event with the Turkish justice minister as a reason,” local official Dieter Spannagel said. Bozdag had been due to meet the Turkish community there on Thursday, but cancelled his address after the Gaggenau authoritie­s withdrew their consent, citing capacity problems at the hall that was to have been used.

Cologne city authoritie­s also withdrew permission for the Union of European Turkish Democrats to use a hall on Sunday for a speech by Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekci. Writing on Twitter, Turkey’s EU Minister Omer Celik said Germany was damaging “the bridges between the democracie­s and building ideologica­l Berlin walls that cut people off from each other.” And Cavusoglu accused German officials of double standards and failing to “honor democracy, freedom of expression or freedom of assembly”. Lashing out, he accused them of allowing “terrorists” from the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party to speak but denying the same right to Erdogan. — AFP

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