Reportedly, Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
announced to expel the ambassadors of 10 Western countries who appealed for the
release of Osman Kavala. Seven of these ambassadors represent Turkey’s NATO
allies.
The expulsions, if carried out, would cause the worst rift with the
West in Erdogan’s 19 years in power.
“I have ordered our
Foreign Minister to declare these 10 ambassadors as persona non grata as soon
as possible,” Erdogan said on Saturday, referring to a term used in diplomacy
that signifies the first step before expulsion. He did not set a firm date.
“They must know and
understand Turkey,” Erdogan added, accusing the envoys of “indecency”.
“They must leave here the day they no longer know Turkey,”
Erdogan said.
Lately, the envoys had issued a highly unusual joint
statement saying the continued detention of Parisian-born activist Osman Kavala
“cast a shadow” over Turkey. Kavala has become a symbol of the sweeping crackdown Erdogan unleashed after surviving the coup attempt.
The United States, Germany, Canada, Denmark, Finland,
France, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway and Sweden called for a just and
speedy resolution to Kavala’s case.
Speaking to the AFP news agency from his jail cell last
week, Kavala said he felt like a tool in Erdogan’s attempts to blame a foreign
plot for domestic opposition to his nearly two-decade rule.
Kavala said on Friday he would no longer attend his trial as
a fair hearing was impossible after recent comments by Erdogan.
The Council of Europe, the continent’s top human rights
watchdog, issued a final warning to Turkey to comply with a 2019 European Court
of Human Rights order to release Kavala pending trial.
If Turkey fails to do so by its next meeting scheduled to
commence on November 30 and continue till December 02, the Strasbourg-based
council could vote to launch its first disciplinary proceedings against Ankara.
European Parliament President David Sassoli tweeted: “The
expulsion of 10 ambassadors is a sign of the authoritarian drift of the Turkish
government. We will not be intimidated.
A source at the German Foreign Ministry also said the 10
countries were consulting with one another. German lawmakers called for a
tough response.
“Erdogan’s unscrupulous actions against his critics are
becoming increasingly uninhibited,” Bundestag vice president Claudia Roth told
the dpa news agency.
She said Erdogan’s “authoritarian course must be confronted
internationally” and demanded sanctions and a halt to weapons exports to
Turkey.
“The possible expulsion of 10 ambassadors, including the
representatives of Germany and many of Turkey’s NATO allies, would be unwise,
undiplomatic and would weaken the cohesion of the alliance,” lawmaker and
foreign policy expert Alexander Graf Lambsdorff tweeted. “Erdogan can have no
interest in that.”
Norway said its embassy had not received any notification from
Turkish authorities.
“Our ambassador has not done anything that warrants an
expulsion,” said the ministry’s chief spokesperson, Trude Maaseide, adding that
Turkey was well aware of Norway’s views.
“We will continue to call on Turkey to comply with democratic
standards and the rule of law to which the country committed itself under the
European Human Rights Convention,” Maaseide said.
Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod said his ministry had
not received any official notification, but was in contact with its friends and
allies.
“We will continue to guard our common values and principles,
as also expressed in the joint declaration,” he said in a statement.