The Borneo Post (Sabah)

German and Turkish top diplomats meet to ease row

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GOSLAR, Germany: Germany’s Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel on Saturday hosts his Turkish counterpar­t Mevlut Cavusoglu for talks as Berlin and Ankara try to end a festering crisis.

Relations between the Nato partners have been badly strained, especially since Turkey’s 2016 failed coup and subsequent crackdown which saw tens of thousands arrested, including several German or dual citizens.

Germany, home to a threemilli­on-strong ethnic Turkish community, last year advised its investors and holiday-makers to avoid Turkey and urged a cut in EU funding linked to its stalled membership talks.

However, Ankara has in recent weeks sent a flurry of signals that it wants a return to warmer relations with the EU and Germany, at a time it is on tense terms with the United States, Israel and some Gulf states.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, having declared last month that Turkey “must reduce the number of enemies and increase the number of friends”, met French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris Friday.

Adding a personal touch to Saturday’s talks, Gabriel has invited Turkey’s foreign minister to his home town of Goslar, after the two had meet in November in Cavusoglu’s southern home region of Antalya.

Following press statements around 1000 GMT, Gabriel will take his guest on a stroll through the heritage-listed medieval old town of Goslar, situated near Brunswick on the slopes of the Harz mountains. Cavusoglu in a newspaper commentary Friday urged an end to the ‘megaphone diplomacy’ between Turkey and Germany and a ‘fresh start’ based on friendship and cooperatio­n between ‘equal partners’.

Germany also sought a ‘step by step’ rapprochem­ent and said Saturday’s talks would cover a full range of topics including the ‘difficult’ ones, a foreign ministry spokeswoma­n said.

The main hurdle now is the detention of Die Welt daily’s German-Turkish correspond­ent Deniz Yucel on terror charges since last February, and of another six Germans Berlin says are jailed for “political reasons”.

Turkey has in recent weeks released several of the Germans whom Gabriel has labelled ‘hostages’,amongthemj­ournalist Mesale Tolu.

Hopes grew that Yucel’s case too could be resolved after the Turkish government this week addressed it for the first time in 10 months with a submission to the constituti­onal court, which could soon rule on whether to release him from pre-trial detention.

Cavusoglu stressed the independen­ce of Turkish courts but pledged that “we’re doing everything in our political power to speed up the judicial process”.

The bilateral crisis of recent years has been fuelled by other disputes — over a German TV comic harshly lampooning Erdogan, a 2016 German parliament­ary resolution on the Armenian genocide, and Turkey denying military base visits to German MPs. — AFP

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SIGMAR GABRIEL
 ??  ?? MEVLUT CAVUSOGLU
MEVLUT CAVUSOGLU

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