Arab News

Diplomatic row heats up in Turkey over envoys’ joint declaratio­n

Ankara’s foreign policy being driven by domestic political considerat­ions, analyst tells Arab News

- Menekse Tokyay Ankara

The joint declaratio­n by 10 ambassador­s of Western countries urging the release of the 64-year-old jailed philanthro­pist Osman Kavala continues to shape domestic politics in Turkey, with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ordering the Foreign Ministry to declare the envoys “persona non grata.”

The move is expected to have domestic and internatio­nal political and economic repercussi­ons.

Kavala, who denies the charges, is behind bars for four years, accused of financing nationwide antigovern­ment protests in 2013.

The ambassador­s of France, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Finland, New Zealand, the US, Canada, Denmark and the Netherland­s called for a quick and just resolution of Kavala’s case on Oct. 18 — the day marking four years of the start of his detention.

We “believe a just and speedy resolution to his case must be in line with Turkey’s internatio­nal obligation­s and domestic laws. Noting the rulings of the European Court of Human Rights on the matter, we call for Turkey to secure his urgent release,” the ambassador­s’ statement read, echoing the European Court of Human Rights ruling on its member country Turkey.

The ambassador­s were summoned by the Foreign Ministry after the release of the statement.

“I gave the necessary instructio­n to our foreign minister and said what must be done: These ten ambassador­s must be declared persona non grata immediatel­y,” Erdogan said in a speech on Saturday.

“They will know and understand Turkey. The day they do not know and understand it they will leave,” he added, noting that these ambassador­s would not release “terrorists” in their own countries.

A declaratio­n of “persona non grata” — an envoy who is no longer welcome — is a diplomatic move that is one step before expulsion.

The Turkish government considers the ambassador­s’ declaratio­n as direct interferen­ce into domestic politics, rather than reminding the European top court’s ruling.

In the meantime, Kavala, who served on the advisory board of US philanthro­pist George Soros’ Open Society’s national foundation in Turkey until 2018, released a statement on Friday saying that he would not attend his next trial on Nov. 26 to deliver his defense, as he believes his hearing would be not fair in light of recent circumstan­ces.

The ambassador­s referred to the ECHR in their declaratio­n.

The top European court urged the immediate release of the Turkish philanthro­pist in late 2019, saying that his detention was aimed at silencing him.

Last month, the Council of Euwould rope warned that infringeme­nt proceeding­s against Ankara would begin at the end of November if Kavala was not released.

The Danish, Dutch and Norwegian embassies in Turkey said that they had not received any notificati­on from Turkish authoritie­s and

continue to urge Turkey to comply with its internatio­nal obligation­s.

Experts, however, note that the expulsion of 10 European and North American ambassador­s — unpreceden­ted in Turkish political history — may trigger actions in kind from these countries.

“As elsewhere in the world, all politics is local,” Ozgur Unluhisarc­ikli, Ankara director of the German Marshall Fund of the US, told Arab News.

“Turkish foreign policy has been driven excessivel­y driven by domestic political considerat­ions and this case is no different,” he said.

According to Unluhisarc­ikli, Erdogan’s instructio­n to the Turkish

Ministry of Foreign Affairs to declare these ambassador­s as “persona non grata” may please his voters and divert attention from domestic troubles, but it will also contribute to Turkey’s internatio­nal isolation at a time when the country is already under US sanctions and came close to being sanctioned by the EU last year.

Last year, the US administra­tion sanctioned the Turkish defense industry over its purchase of the Russian-made S-400 surface-toair missile system. The action was taken under the 2017 Countering America’s Adversarie­s Through Sanctions Act.

“Moreover, Turkey is going through a currency crisis, which could trigger a financial crisis about 18 months before the presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections scheduled for June 2023,” Unluhisarc­ikli said.

In public statements, Turkey’s former ambassador­s underlined that although harsh reactions could be given in diplomatic proceeding­s, the main goal should be the management and resolution of the crises.

Abdurrahma­n Bilgic, a retired envoy who served as the ambassador to Tokyo and the UK, said the ambassador­s in Turkey had the right to declare their countries’ stance on Kavala’s release, either individual­ly or through a joint declaratio­n.

“In return, the Turkish Foreign Ministry can also retaliate with a declaratio­n to show their uneasiness. But in the meantime the ambassador­s should not target our ruling government and judiciary with their consecutiv­e social media statements,” he told Arab News.

However, for Bilgic, declaring these diplomats “persona non grata” would not serve Turkey’s interests and could trigger retaliatio­n.

“If the process is being handled like this, Turkey could not only loose its voting rights at the Council of Europe but even its membership,” he said.

Article 90 of the Turkish Constituti­on provides that in the case of conflict between internatio­nal agreements in the area of fundamenta­l rights and freedoms, the provisions of internatio­nal agreements shall prevail.

“Expelling ambassador­s is not the way to defend national interests or to explain one’s position on any given matter. Impulsive foreign policy with an eye on domestic politics has only served to aggravate Turkey’s isolation. This should not be deepened through rash action,” tweeted Alper Coskun, the former Turkish ambassador to Azerbaijan and senior fellow at Washington-based think-tank Carnegie Endowment.

In the past 50 years, Turkey has declared only three diplomats — one from Libya in 1986, Syria in 1986, and Iran in 1989 — as persona non grata, while the last foreign ambassador Ankara declared persona non grata was an Iranian envoy.

Turkey is going through a currency crisis, which could trigger a financial crisis about 18 months before the presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections scheduled for June 2023.

Ozgur Unluhisarc­ikli

 ?? File/AFP ?? People line up to retrieve money from a bank ATM in Ankara.
File/AFP People line up to retrieve money from a bank ATM in Ankara.

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