Skip to content
The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

Title

Name

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Mindanao
  • Visayas
  • National
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • International
  • SciTech
  • Health & Wellness
  • Sports
  • About Us
    • Regional Advertising Rates
    • Contact Us
    • Profile
  • Home
  • International
  • Dutch ambassador barred – BBC News
  • Featured
  • International

Dutch ambassador barred – BBC News

Desk Editor March 14, 2017

Turkey has announced a series of measures in retaliation for a Dutch decision to block its ministers from campaigning for a referendum.

Deputy PM Numan Kurtulmus said the Dutch ambassador would be barred from returning to Ankara, and high-level political discussions suspended.

Turkish attempts to hold rallies in Germany, Austria, Switzerland and the Netherlands have been blocked.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused the Dutch and Germans of Nazism.

The BBC’s Mark Lowen in Istanbul says Turkey and the Netherlands, two Nato allies, are now locked in an unprecedented diplomatic crisis.

Meanwhile, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has offered the Netherlands her “full support and solidarity”.

On Monday, the Dutch foreign ministry issued a new travel warning, urging its citizens in Turkey to take care and noting the new “diplomatic tensions”.

The row comes just two days before a general election in the Netherlands dominated by concerns about immigration and Islamic radicalism.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte cited security concerns ahead of the election as a reason for blocking the Turkish rallies.

 

The proposed rallies aimed to encourage a large number of Turks living in Europe to vote Yes in a referendum on 16 April on expanding the president’s powers. The plans were criticised by senior EU officials on Monday.

In Germany, for example, there are more than three million people of Turkish origin, of whom an estimated 1.4 million are eligible to vote in Turkish elections. In effect, the diaspora is Turkey’s fourth-largest electoral district.

Officials in Germany, Austria and the Netherlands said the rallies could stoke tensions.

A gathering in France went ahead, however, after officials said it did not pose a threat.

Two Turkish ministers were barred from addressing crowds in the Dutch city of Rotterdam, with one of them escorted to the German border.

Police used dogs and water cannon against protesters waving Turkish flags in Rotterdam.

Mr Kurtulmus, who is also the Turkish government’s chief spokesman, said: “We are not allowing planes carrying Dutch diplomats or envoys from landing in Turkey or using our airspace.”

Ambassador Kees Cornelis van Rij is currently out of the country, with his charge d’affaires standing in for him.

Mr Kurtulmus added that all high-level political discussions would be halted, and parliament would be advised to withdraw from a bilateral friendship group.

The measures would remain in effect until the Netherlands took steps to “redress its actions”, the deputy prime minister added.

Earlier Mr Erdogan likened the Netherlands to “a banana republic”, demanded international organisations impose sanctions on the Netherlands, and accused countries in the West of “Islamophobia”.

“I have said that I had thought that Nazism was over, but I was wrong,” he said.

Turkish officials have also suggested reconsidering part of a deal with the EU aimed at curbing an influx of migrants, namely Turkey’s efforts to prevent them crossing by land to Greece and Bulgaria.

Mr Rutte said Mr Erdogan’s comment that the Dutch were “Nazi remnants” was “unacceptable”, and demanded an apology.

Responding to Turkish calls for sanctions, he said the Netherlands would “never negotiate under threat”.

In a news conference on Monday, Mrs Merkel said she had condemned Nazi analogies made by Mr Erdogan about Germany the previous week.

“This rejection is also valid for our allies. These comparisons are completely misguided… particularly in the Netherlands that endured so much agony through the National Socialists,” she said.

“That’s why the Netherlands can count on my complete support and solidarity in this.”(BBC News)

Link: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-39262002

 

fb-share-icon
Tweet 20

Continue Reading

Previous: Recep Tayyip Erdogan lashes out anew at Angela Merkel – Al Jazeera
Next: British Parliament backs Brexit – CNN News

Related News

Ursula-von-der-Leyen
  • International

EU to ban all Russian fossil fuel imports by 2027, says von der Leyen

Desk Editor May 7, 2025
India-Pakistan War
  • International

3 civilians killed in Jammu and Kashmir in cross-border firing by Pakistan: Indian Army

Desk Editor May 7, 2025
P20rice-PIA
  • Featured
  • Visayas

Tears of gratitude: Elderly Cebuano first to benefit from PBBM’s P20 Rice Program

Desk Editor May 7, 2025

Trending News

Zamboanga Winners Proclaimed ZC1 1

Zamboanga Winners Proclaimed

May 13, 2025
PhilHealth and DepEd forge partnership to ensure health coverage for all learners PhilHealth-DepEd1 2

PhilHealth and DepEd forge partnership to ensure health coverage for all learners

May 13, 2025
Home Credit PH and KServico Team Up to Bring Fast and Easy Motorcycle Financing to Empower More Filipinos on the Road Home-Credit1 3

Home Credit PH and KServico Team Up to Bring Fast and Easy Motorcycle Financing to Empower More Filipinos on the Road

May 10, 2025
Cebu province stocks 11K sacks of rice for P20/kilo program resumption NFA-rice-PIA 4

Cebu province stocks 11K sacks of rice for P20/kilo program resumption

May 9, 2025
PhilHealth and MMDA unveil “Payong ng Kapanatagan” mural along EDSA to celebrate Public Service and Health Protection PhilHealth_MMDA-Mural-Unveiling2 5

PhilHealth and MMDA unveil “Payong ng Kapanatagan” mural along EDSA to celebrate Public Service and Health Protection

May 9, 2025
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Blog
Copyright © 2025. The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper. All Rights Reserved.