Κι η Politico γράφει για “ομήρους” της Τουρκίας.
ΔΙΑΒΑΣΤΕ ΕΠΙΣΗΣ:
- Foreign Policy-Η Τουρκία είναι κράτος «απαγωγέας» – Η νέα εξωτερική πολιτική της είναι να κρατάει ομήρους
- Gatestone Institute-Για ομήρους κάνει λόγο και το Gatestone Institute αναφερόμενο στους Έλληνες στρατιωτικούς.
‘Hostages’ in Erdoğan’s new Turkey
10/9/17, 4:08 AM CET
Responding to Bild, Gabriel said there had been “no official exchange offer.” Yet as Der Spiegel noted, Erdoğan was said to have suggested the swap during a private conversation with Gabriel, rather than in an official statement or diplomatic note.
Yücel is one of 12 Germans imprisoned in Turkey for “political reasons.” Another journalist, Mesale Tolu, was detained in April and has since been held in an Istanbul women’s prison along with her two-year-old son.
Both Tolu and Yücel have been accused of “terror propaganda” on behalf of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), an insurgent group that has been fighting the Turkish state for decades. State prosecutors have used similar charges to imprison Kurdish journalists and MPs.
“If Turkey was a state with rule of law, Mesale would never have been arrested,” her father, Ali Reza Tolu, told Der Spiegel last month. “She is not guilty of anything. Erdoğan has taken her hostage.”
‘The new Turkey’
Following the arrest of German human rights consultant Peter Steudtner in July, such accusations have grown louder. A spokesman for Germany’s foreign office assured reporters the government was doing everything it could to prevent detained German citizens from “becoming hostages of the Turkish government.” A Turkish prosecutor on Sunday called for Steudtner — alongside close to a dozen other detainees including Swedish activist Ali Gharavi — to serve a 15-year jail sentence on charges of belonging to a terror organization.
Social Democrat leader Martin Schulz told Bild that German citizens in Turkey “run the risk of becoming hostages of President Erdoğan’s politics.” Green party co-leader Cem Özdemir, who is of ethnic Turkish origin and is touted as a potential foreign minister in Germany’s new government, has repeatedly referred to detained Germans as Erdoğan’s “hostages.”
Berlin has revised its travel advice for Turkey in recent months, warning its citizens that consular access to detained Germans could not be guaranteed. German diplomats were only given permission to visit Yücel and Tolu after two months. (Tolu, unlike Yücel, is not a dual national.)
Ankara has rejected accusations that Turkey is unsafe for Germans. Regarding the use of foreign detainees as bargaining chips, the government has stayed silent. Presidential officials contacted for this article either did not respond or were unavailable for comment.
Yet Erdoğan has hinted at potential prisoner swaps before. In August, he told members of his party: “There is a known charlatan in Pennsylvania. His backup team are in Europe, especially Germany, and hang around there. You are feeding these terrorists and then you get up and say, ‘give us so-and-so.’
“First you give [to us], then you will receive from us,” the president added. “The old Turkey is no longer, this Turkey is the new Turkey.”