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German chancellor Angela Merkel, right, speaks with Sigmar Gabriel during the last official session of the German parliament before the Sept. 24, 2017 elections, in Berlin, Germany, Sept. 5, 2017. (Michael Kappeler/dpa via AP) Image Credit: AP

ANKARA

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she’ll bring up the future of Turkey’s bid to join the European Union (EU) with fellow EU leaders when they next meet, raising the prospect of a formal end to Turkish accession to the bloc.

The Turkish lira and bonds dropped as Merkel made her comments to Germany’s lower house of parliament in Berlin yesterday. They build on remarks that the chancellor made in a televised debate on Sunday night with her election challenger, Martin Schulz.

“I will recommend that we discuss the future status of Turkey, including whether to suspend or end” membership talks, Merkel said in her speech to lower-house lawmakers. “This is a process that needs to be considered resolutely, but also carefully.”

While EU talks with Turkey are effectively stalled, the escalating rhetoric risks further stoking tensions with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has made repeated references to Germany’s Nazi past and said that Germany is becoming “racist.”

Erdogan’s spokesman accused German politicians of surrendering to populism after Merkel’s comments.

Relations between the two countries have been strained since last year’s failed coup in Turkey and Berlin’s strong condemnation of Erdogan following a subsequent crackdown that has seen more than 50,000 people arrested. “Attacking Turkey-Erdogan and ignoring Germany’s and Europe’s fundamental and urgent problems are a reflection of a lack of vision,” Ebrahim Kalin said in a tirade on Twitter.

Kalin said this was a “surrender to populism and marginalisation/hostility (which) only fuels discrimination and racism”.

In a TV showdown with challenger Martin Schulz on Sunday ahead of elections on September 24, Merkel said it was “clear that Turkey should not become a member of the European Union”.

Merkel said she would discuss with EU counterparts if “we can end these membership talks”, adding: “I don’t see [Turkey] ever joining and I had never believed that it would happen.”

Worsening ties

Bilateral ties worsened after Turkey detained German citizens including Turkish-German journalist Deniz Yucel, the Istanbul correspondent for the Die Welt newspaper. Yucel has now spent over 200 days in custody ahead of a trial on terror charges.

Last week two more German citizens were arrested, bringing the total number of Germans in Turkish custody to 12.

Erdogan has previously accused Germany of sheltering coup plotters as well as Kurdish militants and demanded their extradition.

Kalin appeared to suggest that Germany supported terrorism, by giving space to groups like the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and the movement led by US-based Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen who is accused of ordering the July 15, 2016 attempted putsch.

Gulen strongly denies the charges but Turkey calls his movement the ‘Fethullah Terrorist Organisation’ (FETO).

The movement denies this, insisting it promotes Islam, charity and education.

“Is Germany, which openly embraces organisations like the PKK and FETO, not aware that it defends terrorists and coup-plotters, not democracy?”

Last month, Erdogan urged ethnic Turks in Germany to vote against Merkel’s conservatives and their coalition partners, the Social Democrats, in the election.

But Kalin dismissed the vote, saying: “It does not matter which party wins in the German elections because the mentality which will win is now obvious.”

— AFP