The New Zealand Herald

Row grows between Turkey, Netherland­s

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The escalating dispute between Nato allies Turkey and the Netherland­s hit a new low yesterday, with a Turkish minister escorted out of the country less than a day after Turkey’s foreign minister was denied entry, prompting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to call the Dutch “Nazi remnants”.

The diplomatic clash was over plans by Turkish government officials to campaign in the Netherland­s for a referendum back home.

Family and Social Policies Minister Fatma Betul Sayan Kaya had arrived in the country from Germany but was prevented from entering Turkey’s diplomatic compound in Rotterdam, setting up a standoff with armed police. She was later sent under escort back to Germany.

As she was approachin­g the German border, Kaya wrote that “the whole world must take action against this fascist practice! Such a treatment against a woman minister cannot be accepted”.

The Dutch were equally angry and Prime Minister Mark Rutte called Erdogan’s Nazi comment “a crazy remark,” while Rotterdam Mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb said the Turkish consul general was guilty of a “scandalous deception” after he allegedly denied that the minister was coming despite government warnings to stay away. “He lied to us and didn’t tell the truth,” the mayor said. “The deception worsened when they drove in different columns to Rotterdam” to try to fool Dutch authoritie­s.

Hundreds of pro-Turkey protesters scuffled with police into the night in Rotterdam.

The diplomatic clash with Kaya came after Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu was barred from landing in the Netherland­s and Turkish officials closed off the Dutch Embassy and called its ambassador no longer welcome. The Dutch barred Cavusoglu from entering because of objections to his intention to attend a rally in Rotterdam for a referendum on constituti­onal reforms to expand Erdogan’s powers, which the Dutch see as a step backward from democracy. Turkish officials have been campaignin­g in various European cities with Turkish population­s before the April 16 vote.

The Dutch Government said it withdrew landing permission because of “risks to public order and security,” leading Cavusoglu to say: “So is the foreign minister of the Turkish republic a terrorist?”

Erdogan told a rally in Istanbul that the Dutch “do not know politics or internatio­nal diplomacy”. He compared them to “Nazi remnants, they are fascists”.

Erdogan had this month already compared German policies to “Nazi practices,” after German municipali­ties cancelled several campaign events by Turkish officials.

A Turkish Foreign Ministry official said the Dutch Embassy in Ankara and its consulate in Istanbul were closed off because of security reasons. Similar precaution­s were taken at the Dutch charge d’affaires’ house and the ambassador’s residence.

The ministry also said that it doesn’t want to see the Dutch ambassador, who is out of the country, return to his post for some time.— AP

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