Turkey, Europe in fresh migrant deal, visa row

Turkey, Europe in fresh migrant deal, visa row

by Joseph Anthony
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German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier speaks during a Pledging Conference in Support of Iraq, co-hosted by the United States, Canada, Germany, Japan, Kuwait, and The Netherlands at the State Department in Washington, U.S., July 20, 2016. REUTERS photo

Turkey and the European Union have found themselves embroiled in a new row over the migrant and visa-free travel topics.

One day after Turkey summoned the German chargรฉ dโ€™affaires at Berlinโ€™s Ankara embassy after Turkish President Recep Tayyip ErdoฤŸan was banned from making a speech by video in Cologne, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier dismissed his Turkish counterpartโ€™s remarks regarding the Turkey-EU migrant and visa liberalization deals.

Asked if Turkey could โ€œblackmailโ€ the EU over the refugee pact, Steinmeier told the Rheinische Post newspaper: โ€œThat is absurd.โ€

โ€œThe fact is there are conditions for the visa-free policy and they are known to everyone,โ€ Steinmeier said Aug. 2.

โ€œTurkey pledged to undertake the necessary steps to hold up its end of the agreement. That is not yet the case and Turkey still has work to do.โ€

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlรผt ร‡avuลŸoฤŸlu said in an interview with the German daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on July 31 that Ankara could withdraw from the accord as it would abandon a deal with the EU reached to stem the flow of migrants into the bloc if the EU did not grant visa-free travel to Turkish citizens by October.

The row was initiated with a German courtโ€™s ban on ErdoฤŸan from holding a live speech via videoconference during an anti-coup protest in Cologne on July 31.

German Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel hit back Aug. 1 during a campaign rally for a state election, saying โ€œGermany or Europe must in no way let themselves be blackmailedโ€ by Turkey over the migrants pact.
Late on Aug. 1, ร‡avuลŸoฤŸlu engaged in a Twitter spat with his Austrian counterpart, Sebastian Kurz, over the migrant deal.

Writing over ร‡avuลŸoฤŸluโ€™s remarks, the Austrian foreign minister tweeted, โ€œI do not accept ร‡avuลŸoฤŸluโ€™s ultimatum and return it. The EU cannot proceed with dependencies and must protect its borders.โ€

Replying to Kurzโ€™s tweet, ร‡avuลŸoฤŸlu later said, โ€œDas ist nicht [This is not] ultimatum Sebastian, it is my opinion. Freedom of expression my friend.โ€

The March 18 deal aims to discourage irregular migration through the Aegean Sea by taking stricter measures against human traffickers and improving the conditions of nearly 3 million Syrian refugees in Turkey.

Meanwhile, the Council of Europe Secretary General Thorbjorn Jagland was set to arrive in Turkey on Aug. 3 for meetings with officials and opposition leaders after Turkey suspended the European Convention on Human Rights, which is reinforced by the councilโ€™s European Court of Human Rights, following the failed July 15 coup attempt.

Jagland is due to meet ErdoฤŸan, Prime Minister Binali Yฤฑldฤฑrฤฑm, ร‡avuลŸoฤŸlu and Justice Minister Bekir BozdaฤŸ as well as party leaders.

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