Cologne / AFP
Tens of thousands of supporters of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rallied in the German city of Cologne on Sunday as tensions over Turkey’s failed coup put authorities on edge.
Waving the Turkish flag and chanting “Turkey”, the demonstrators turned the rally site next to the River Rhine into a sea of red as they began the demonstration by singing the Turkish and German national anthems. Police put the turnout at around 40,000 by 1500 GMT.
“We are here because our compatriots in Germany are standing up for democracy and against the attempted military coup in Turkey,” said Turkey’s sports minister Akif Cagatay Kilic at the rally, Tagesspiegel daily reported.
“The message to be sent from the event is that in Turkey, all parties and NGOs want to stand together against the coup and to defend democracy,” added the minister, who was born in Germany.
Since the attempted July 15 power grab, Erdogan’s government has launched a crackdown, detaining almost 19,000 people and sparking international concern.
Ratcheting up its clampdown on the military, Ankara on Sunday dismissed nearly 1,400 military personnel, including a top aide to Erdogan, and confirmed it would close military schools and academies.
Erdogan—who says a group within the military acted on the orders of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen—has also said he will bring the country’s spy agency and military chief of staff directly under his control.
The drama has spilled over into Germany, home to three million ethnic Turks—the biggest Turkish diaspora in the world.
The Cologne rally was staged by groups including the pro-Erdogan Union of European-Turkish Democrats (UETD). Hours before the event Germany’s constitutional court banned an application to show live speeches from Turkey by politicians including Erdogan, amid fears they could work the crowd up further.
The decision sparked anger in Turkey, with presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin calling the ban unacceptable and a “violation of the freedom of expression and the right to free assembly”.
“We are curious about the real reason why the German authorities and the constitutional court banned President Erdogan’s message and hope that the German authorities will provide a satisfactory explanation.”
‘Don’t bring Turkey tensions here
Meanwhile, skirmishes broke out at several smaller counter-demonstrations, with police moving in to separate around 80 right-wing nationalist Turks and 100 Kurds.
Some 250 far-right extremists, including many hooligans, had also come together before being dispersed by police. In a bid to head-off any potential violence between the different camps, 2,700 officers—including several Turkish speakers—have been deployed to keep the peace, while eight water cannon were also standing by on the streets.
Cologne’s police chief Juergen Mathies warned: “One thing I want to make clear is that we will intervene against any kind of violence quickly, decisively and forcefully.”
The tension comes at a time when relations between Germany and Turkey are already strained over the German parliament’s decision to brand as genocide the World War I-era Armenian massacre by Ottoman forces. German politicians led by Chancellor Angela Merkel have issued strongly-worded statements against Erdogan’s crackdown following the failed putsch.
The hardline response “flouts the rule of law”, Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert has said, also blasting “revolting scenes of caprice and revenge” in the wake of the failed coup.
At the same time, Ankara is demanding that Germany extradite suspects linked to Gulen. The 75-year-old cleric has strongly denied any involvement. Erdogan enjoys large support among the diaspora in Germany, where around 1.5 million people with Turkish nationality can vote in Turkish elections.
His AKP party won 60 percent of votes cast in Germany in last November’s election, a bigger share of the vote than in Turkey.
Germany’s integration commissioner Aydan Ozoguz underlined Erdogan’s influence, saying he was concerned that “the relationships of people living here with Turkey are being massively exploited politically.”
In the days following the botched coup, pro-Erdogan activists have stormed locations in Germany popular with Gulen’s followers.
Critics of the Turkish president have also complained of abuse and threats against them on social media.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Saturday warned in an interview with Sueddeutsche Zeitung daily: “It is not right to bring Turkey’s domestic political tensions here… and intimidate people who have other political convictions.”