Germany open to receiving ‘politically persecuted’ Turks

 

Berlin / AFP

Germany is open to providing protection for Turks who have been “politically persecuted” by Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government in its widening crackdown following a failed putsch, a senior German official said on Tuesday.
“Critics in Turkey should know that the German government stands in solidarity with them,” Michael Roth, state secretary at the foreign ministry, told Die Welt daily.
Germany is “as a rule open to the politically persecuted,” he said, adding that “they can seek asylum in Germany. That’s not just the case for journalists.”
Relations between Ankara and Berlin have been strained in the wake of the July 15 failed military coup, with Germany repeatedly expressing concern over the scope of the crackdown on suspects.
Last Friday, Berlin summoned Turkey’s envoy after almost a dozen MPs from the main pro-Kurdish party were detained.
In a strongly worded statement, the ministry said Ankara should not use a crackdown against terror as an excuse to muzzle the opposition.
Reiterating Germany’s concerns, Roth said: “What is happening in Turkey right now is not in line with European values—the rule of law, democracy and media freedom.”
Separately, President Joachim Gauck also sent a strong signal to Ankara, as he pledged German support for democratic voices in Turkey during a meeting late Monday with the former editor-in-chief of top opposition daily Cumhuriyet, Can Dundar.
Gauck told Dundar of his respect for his work and engagement, according to sources who attended the closed-door meeting.
Turkey last week remanded in custody nine staff from Cumhuriyet, adding growing international alarm over the use of a state of emergency implemented in the wake of the coup against Erdogan’s critics.

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