Arab Times

Scuffles greet Erdogan visit

Last minute meet

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WASHINGTON, April 1, (AFP): Journalist­s and supporters of Kurdish militants scuffled and traded insults with Turkish guards protecting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Washington ahead of his meeting with US leader Barack Obama.

A small group of protesters gathered Thursday outside the Washington think tank where the Turkish president was to speak, brandishin­g the banners of the YPG, a Kurdish militant group based in Syria.

Ankara regards the YPG as an affiliate of the PKK, Turkey’s main Kurdish separatist movement, and has declared it a terrorist threat.

However, Washington sees the YPG guerrillas as key allies in its campaign against the Islamic State group.

Just ahead of Erdogan’s arrival at the Brookings Institute in Washington, Turkish security officials clashed with the crowd -- both sides exchanging insults and scuffling -- before local police were able to separate them.

The Turkish guards also about the press.

One aimed a chest-high kick at an American reporter attempting to film the harassment of a Turkish opposition reporter, and another called a female foreign policy scholar a “PKK whore.”

Turkish security tried to prevent two Turkish journalist­s, one of them working for the opposition daily Zaman that has been seized by the government, from entering.

All this happened before an Obama-Erdogan meeting that seems to have been arranged at the last minute.

Erdogan

Snub

Having previously stated the pair were unlikely to hold sit-down talks -- a decision widely perceived as a snub from Washington -- the White House said the two men had in fact met on the sidelines of a nuclear security summit.

They discussed US-Turkey cooperatio­n on regional security, counterter­rorism and migration, it said.

The absence of a presidenti­al meeting on Erdogan’s trip to the US capital had been glaring.

The two countries are meant to be close NATO allies in the thick of a fight against the Islamic State (IS) group in Syria.

But tensions have been stirred by Ankara’s attacks on Kurdish militants, some of whom are seen by Washington as the best bet for tackling IS in Iraq and Syria.

Turkey says the militants are linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has fought a long battle for Kurdish independen­ce.

Turkish forays into northern Iraq have also strained ties.

The White House has been increasing­ly outspoken in recent months about threats to free speech and democracy in Turkey.

And on Thursday it restated its belief in the need for press freedom in Turkey, amid ugly scenes at an Erdogan speech in the US capital.

As the Turkish leader flew in to the US capital ahead of the nuclear safety summit, news broke of another deadly bomb attack targeting police in his country’s southeast, where his forces are battling Kurdish militants.

In the incident outside the think tank, Brookings staff prevented Turkish officials from driving out the reporters, who had been invited to cover the event, amid tense scenes.

Meanwhile outside pro-Kurdish demonstrat­ors chanted: “Erdogan, fascist” and “Erdogan, baby-killer.”

Global watchdog Reporters Without Borders slammed the guards’ “unacceptab­le behavior.”

Speech

set

But Erdogan appeared unruffled as he arrived to give a speech and answer questions, delivering a forceful address in which he ceded no ground to critics at home or abroad.

On the renewed battle with the Kurds, Erdogan was clear -- for Turkey, the PKK and the YPG are one and the same, vicious terrorists, and no better than the Islamic State group.

“Terrorists unfortunat­ely keep attacking our country,” he said. “We cannot tolerate this anymore. European countries and other countries, I hope they can see the true face of terrorists in these attacks.”

Erdogan complained that, just because the YPG are fighting against the IS group with Western support, some see them as what he derisively termed “good terrorists” and complained that they have backers in Europe.

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