Bangkok Post

Merkel vows continuity on final visit to Erdogan

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Chancellor Angela Merkel on Saturday vowed continuity in Germany’s relations with Turkey that included both cooperatio­n and criticism of Ankara as she paid her final visit to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Ms Merkel and Mr Erdogan developed complex but close relations over the German chancellor’s 16-year term that navigated the perils of Turkey’s tumultuous ties with the West.

Their bond was instrument­al in helping Europe manage a refugee crisis in 2016 and calm simmering tensions in the east Mediterran­ean last year.

Ms Merkel also helped iron out some of the difficulti­es that have crept into

Mr Erdogan’s relations with Washington and French President Emmanuel Macron.

The two leaders had lunch and private talks in a presidenti­al villa overlookin­g the Bosphorus on the latest leg of Ms Merkel’s parting foreign tour.

“I have always said that our collaborat­ion was very good in the years that I worked with Mr Erdogan,” Ms Merkel told reporters after the talks.

“I criticised Turkey on the issue of human rights and individual freedoms. We looked for solutions. We could have difference­s, but we depended on each other,” she said.

The 67-year-old German leader said her “advice” to Turkey today was to expect “the same thing for the coming government in Germany.

“The relationsh­ip between Turkey and Germany, with its negative and positive sides, will go on. It will be recognised by the next government,” she said.

Mr Erdogan referred to Ms Merkel as his “dear friend” twice during the closing media event.

But he also hinted at the difficulti­es Turkey might have in promoting its interests after Ms Merkel formally gives way to a new coalition government taking shape in Berlin following elections last month.

“If there had been no coalition government, [Germany’s] relations with Turkey might have been easier. Of course, it is not easy to work with a coalition government,” Mr Erdogan said.

Mr Erdogan headed Turkey as prime minister when Ms Merkel became the first woman to head Germany in 2005.

The two have since shared a long list of difference­s and numerous testy exchanges on issues ranging from Turkey’s crackdown on human rights to its military campaigns in Syria and Libya.

But Germany also played a role in defusing a crisis in the Mediterran­ean last year that erupted when Turkey began searching for gas in disputed waters claimed by Cyprus and Greece.

Analysts say Ms Merkel was more sympatheti­c to Mr Erdogan’s position because of the presence of an estimated 3 million ethnic Turks in Germany.

She has also been sensitive to Mr Erdogan’s threats to let an estimated 5 million migrants and refugees temporaril­y living in Turkey under a 2016 deal with the EU to leave for Europe unless Ankara’s interests are respected by Brussels.

 ?? ?? Merkel: Managed a 2016 refugee crisis
Merkel: Managed a 2016 refugee crisis

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