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Turkey slams 'arrogant' German reaction to Erdoğan poll call

Turkish top officials condemned German reaction to comments by President Erdoğan urging ethnic Turks in Germany to vote against parties which are enemies of Turkey.

AFP WORLD
Published August 19,2017
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Turkey on Saturday lashed out at "arrogant" German reaction to comments by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan urging ethnic Turks in Germany to vote against both parties in Chancellor Angela Merkel's ruling coalition.

The latest spat between Ankara and Berlin risks propelling a months-long crisis in ties between the two NATO allies to a new level ahead of Germany's September 24 general election.

Erdoğan said ethnic Turks in the country should not cast their ballots for Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the Social Democratic Party (SPD) of Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel or the Greens, labelling all three parties "enemies of Turkey".

Gabriel condemned Erdoğan's comments as an "unprecedented act of interference" while Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said on Twitter: "We expect foreign governments to not interfere in our internal affairs."

The SPD's chancellor candidate Martin Schulz went even further, saying Erdoğan had "lost all sense of proportion".

But Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdağ, who is also the official government spokesman, strongly defended Erdoğan's comments saying they were only aimed at Turkish-origin voters in Germany.

"This was expressed very openly and clearly. But then look at these very disrespectful and very arrogant reactions that go beyond the bounds of decency," he said in televised comments.

"I want to condemn these reactions and the disrespectful language used," he added.

Bozdağ accused Germany of meddling in Turkey's April 16 referendum on expanding Erdoğan's powers saying the German "government's attitude was very clear" in backing the 'No' camp.

He also reaffirmed past Turkish accusations against Germany that it was giving refuge both to wanted Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants and suspected plotters in the July 15, 2016, failed coup bid.

"Germany supports the PKK," said Bozdağ. "The PKK is a terror group but Germany quite clearly gives it protection."

Analysts say that some 1.2 million people of Turkish origin will have the right to vote in the September polls as German citizens.