The National - News

ERDOGAN AND MERKEL START TO BURY THE HATCHET DESPITE FROSTY TALKS

▶ Turkish president’s three-day visit to Germany viewed as a success in terms of trade with EU and migration deal

- DAVID CROSSLAND Berlin

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made no friends during his three-day visit to Germany but the trip heralds gradual progress in his country’s relations with the European Union.

The visit, as unharmonio­us as expected but without major upsets, was born out of necessity on both sides rather than any heartfelt desire for a rapprochem­ent.

Mr Erdogan needs to boost trade with the EU to haul his country out of an economic crisis made worse by US sanctions and has led the Turkish lira to slump 40 per cent against the euro and the dollar this year.

Europe, and Chancellor Angela Merkel in particular, need his continued co-operation to halt illegal migration across the Aegean Sea from Turkey to Greece under a deal reached in 2016 that dramatical­ly reduced the refugee influx.

The bloc’s rising populists have criticised the German leader for her open-door policy at the height of the migrant crisis and she is under increasing pressure at home from the farright AfD party.

During talks, Mr Erdogan pledged to meet the EU’s criteria for achieving visa liberalisa­tion for Turkish citizens, and called for the EU-Turkish Customs union to be expanded and Turkey’s stalled EU membership talks to be revived.

Membership of the EU’s Customs union is a major boon for trade because no duty is levied on goods travelling within it.

Turkey and the EU have had a union on trade since 1996 but Germany has blocked talks to widen it to include services and agricultur­al products. And relations have deteriorat­ed too far in recent years for quick progress to be likely.

Mr Erdogan, enraged by EU and German criticism of his clampdowns on political opponents, has accused politician­s in Berlin of behaving like Nazis, stopped legislator­s from visiting troops in Turkey and lobbied them to prosecute a comedian for insulting the president in a poem.

The greatest damage came from Turkey jailing German citizens on what Berlin regards as invented political charges of belonging to banned organisati­ons. The row has damaged German corporate investment in Turkey.

But the ever-diplomatic Mrs Merkel insisted that the trip was a step forward, even though “deep difference­s” remained. “People who don’t talk to each other won’t find any common positions,” she said alongside Mr Erdogan on Friday. “Sometimes that takes a long time. But I am committed to such talks.”

She called for the release of those being held but stressed that the Nato allies had many common interests, not least because Germany is home to about three million people of Turkish descent, Turkey’s biggest diaspora.

The talks yielded limited concrete progress with the two leaders agreeing to increase discussion­s on economic, technologi­cal and security co-operation, and to call a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin and French leader Emmanuel Macron this month to discuss the Syrian war.

“Both sides undertook a cautious attempt at reconcilia­tion,” said Gokay Sofuoglu, chairman of the Turkish Community in Germany.

“The open and critical exchange of known views gives hope for further talks.”

Norbert Roettgen, chairman of the German parliament’s foreign affairs committee, was less upbeat.

“The timing of this visit was wrong. It was far too early,” Mr Roettgen said. “The Turkish-German relationsh­ip is neither better nor simpler after this visit.”

Mr Erdogan angered his hosts at a banquet held by President Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Friday night, departing from the text of a speech to claim Germany was harbouring terrorists.

He was referring to members of the Kurdistan Workers Party, which is banned in Germany and has waged a decades-long insurgency for Kurdish autonomy in Turkey.

On Saturday, Mr Erdogan was accused of hijacking the opening of Germany’s largest mosque in Cologne for his own political purposes.

The event attracted hundreds of Turkish nationalis­ts chanting “Erdogan” and making the four-finger Rabaa sign that is also used by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d and symbolises political Islam.

Critics said he turned an event that should have celebrated the integratio­n of ethnic Turks in Germany into one that highlighte­d divisions between the communitie­s.

German officials, angered at being invited late to the event, boycotted the Turkish-language ceremony where Mr Erdogan gave a combative speech, saying football player Mesut Ozil had been hounded out of the German team after the World Cup because of his Turkish roots. “This racism has to end,” he said.

German politician­s and commentato­rs criticised the red-carpet treatment for a leader widely vilified as an autocrat.

“I stayed away because I didn’t want to be an extra in the opening ceremony of our mosque by Herr Erdogan,” said Josef Wirges, Mayor of the Cologne district of Ehrenfeld, home to the mosque.

“He thinks he’s a sultan who can come here and tell everybody what to do. Tomorrow when this gentleman has gone we’ll have to clear up the mess he’s left behind.”

The Bild newspaper called Mr Erdogan’s visit shameful.

“Erdogan’s first official act upon arriving was to stretch four fingers from the window of his Maybach limousine,” the newspaper’s editorial said.

“The greeting of Islamists. The greeting of the spiritual fathers of September 11 ... The greeting that tells Germans with Turkish roots in Germany: you are proud Turks and not softie Germans.”

 ??  ?? Recep Tayyip Erdogan with his wife, Emine, after the opening of a mosque in Cologne, Germany, on Saturday. He was later criticised for ‘hijacking the event for his political purposes’
Recep Tayyip Erdogan with his wife, Emine, after the opening of a mosque in Cologne, Germany, on Saturday. He was later criticised for ‘hijacking the event for his political purposes’

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