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Turkey vs Netherlands: how a Nazi insult, travel bans and violent protests created a major diplomatic incident

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A Dutch riot policeman tries to get his dog to let go of a man after riots broke out during a pro Erdogan demonstration at the Turkish consulate in Rotterdam. Photo: AP
Associated Press

The escalating dispute between Nato allies Turkey and the Netherlands hit a new low Sunday, with a Turkish minister escorted out of the country less than a day after Turkey’s foreign minister was denied entry, prompting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to call the Dutch “Nazi remnants.”

“Hey Holland! If you are sac­rificing Turkish-Dutch relations for the sake of the elections on Wednesday, you will pay a price,” an angry Erdogan told a cere­mony in Istanbul, referring to

the March 15 election in Turkey’s Nato ally.

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“They will learn what diplomacy is,” he growled, adding that what happened “cannot remain unanswered”.

The diplomatic clash was over plans by Turkish government officials to campaign in the Netherlands for a referendum back home. Family and Social Policies Minister Fatma Betul Sayan Kaya had arrived in the country from Germany but was prevented from entering Turkey’s diplomatic compound in Rotterdam, setting up a standoff with armed police. She was later sent under escort back to Germany.

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As she was approaching the German border, Kaya wrote that “the whole world must take action against this fascist practice! Such a treatment against a woman minister cannot be accepted.”

Turkish residents of the Netherlands gather for a protest outside Turkey's consulate in Rotterdam. Photo: AFP
Turkish residents of the Netherlands gather for a protest outside Turkey's consulate in Rotterdam. Photo: AFP
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