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Draghi 'dictator' remark 'total rudeness' says Erdogan

Draghi 'dictator' remark 'total rudeness' says Erdogan

Turkish president comments a week after Italy PM's statement

ISTANBUL, 14 April 2021, 17:15

Redazione ANSA

ANSACheck

- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

-     ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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Premier Mario Draghi's calling Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan a "dictator" was "total rudeness, total rudeness," Erdogan told the Anadolu news agency Wednesday, almost a week after Draghi made the remark.
    "Before saying such a thing to Tayyip Erdogan you should know your own history, but we have seen that you don't know it.
    You're a person who was appointed, not elected," Erdogan went on, calling the Italian PM's remark "total impertinence".
    He said Draghi's remark had damaged bilateral relations.
    Draghi called Erdogan a dictator in a press conference on Thursday.
    The Turkish government rapidly summoned the Italian ambassador to Ankara to express its disapproval of the comments, which Draghi made in relation to the 'sofagate' case regarding the failure to provide a seat for European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen during a meeting on Tuesday.
    "I am really sorry about the humiliation that the commission president had to suffer with these, let's call them for what they are, dictators," Draghi said.
    The Italian premier said the EU had to be frank with figures like Erdogan, stressing the differences in outlook while at the same time being ready to cooperate.
    Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu called the comments "ugly and unreasonable" and said they should be taken back.
    The deputy leader of Erdogan's AKP party, Numan Kurtulmus, said "there are no dictators in our country. If you want to see a dictator, look to your own history. Look to Mussolini".
    Draghi won backing from several quarters on Friday with European People's Party (EPP) chief Manfred Weber among the senior voices expressing support.
    "Prime Minister Draghi is right, under President Erdogan's lead Turkey has moved away from the rule of law, democracy and fundamental freedoms in the last decade," Weber said in a statement sent to Italian media.
    Turkey, Weber said, "is not a free country for all its citizens.
    "If Europe wants to build a constructive partnership with countries like Turkey, and it is in our strategic interest to do so, we ought to speak clearly and honestly about the actual facts.
    "This is also the reason why we have been asking the (EU) Council for years to finally close the procedure of enlargement of the EU to (include) Turkey. We are categorically against a prospect of accession of Turkey to the EU and as long as it is on the table it hinders a franker and more realistic relationships with the country".
    Turkey recently pulled out of the 2011 Istanbul Convention on violence against women, dismaying activists who say gender violence is on the rise there.
    Giorgia Meloni, the leader of the right-wing Brothers of Italy (FdI) party, said Draghi was spot on.
    "Brothers of Italy has denounced the authoritarian, Islamist direction Erdogan's Turkey has taken for years and asked the EU to withdraw Ankara's status as a candidate country," said Meloni, whose party is the only major group in parliament not to back Draghi's broad coalition government.
    "Premier Draghi's clear, firm words were good.
    "We demand respect and we hope that the premier's comments are just the government's first step in powerfully defending Italian interests in the Mediterranean and stemming the political and cultural expansionism of the Islamist regime in Ankara".
   

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