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TURKEY

Egypt holds Bern teacher over ‘terrorist name’

A Swiss primary school teacher from the canton of Bern who went to Egypt for a holiday is being held there on suspicion of being a terrorist because of his name.

Egypt holds Bern teacher over 'terrorist name'
Ralph Künti: improbably suspected because of his name. Photo: Facebook

Rolf Künti, 29, went to the North African country with a colleague for a one-week holiday.

But on the day of his planned return to Switzerland he was detained on Monday at the Sharm el-Sheikh airport where he was told by customs he was banned from leaving, according to Swiss media.

“They told me that my name was that of a terrorist if you translate it into Arabic,” Künti is quoted as saying by 20 Minuten, the online news site.

Since then he has been detained at a hotel, while his colleague returned to Switzerland.

Künti said he doubts that he will see his third-grade pupils soon.

“I have given up hope that I can leave quickly,” he said.

For the principal at Künti’s school, the situation is completely absurd.

“Rolf Künti is a serious, absolutely correct, model teacher,” he told 20 Minuten.

A substitute teacher has taken over from Künti, the newspaper reported.

His students fluctuate between a sense of sadness and one of “adventure” over the situation, the principal said.

But the school’s staff are now “slightly annoyed”.

The Swiss department of federal affairs said it is following up the case.

“Our embassy in Cairo is in regular contact with the relevant local authorities,” spokesman George Farago told TeleBärn, the German-language TV station in Bern.

Künti would receive help under the framework of consular protection, Farago added.

The Egyptian Embassy in Bern said it had no knowledge of the case, 20 Minuten reported.

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ISLAM

Erdogan calls French separatism bill ‘guillotine’ of democracy

Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday denounced a planned French law designed to counter "Islamist separatism" as a "guillotine" of democracy.

Erdogan calls French separatism bill 'guillotine' of democracy
Erdogan has already denounced the proposed measures as "anti-Muslim". Photo: Adem ALTAN/AFP

The draft legislation has been criticised both inside France and abroad for stigmatising Muslims and giving the state new powers to limit speech and religious groups.

“The adoption of this law, which is openly in contradiction of human rights, freedom of religion and European values, will be a guillotine blow inflicted on French democracy,” said Erdogan in a speech in Ankara.

The current version of the planned law would only serve the cause of extremism, putting NGOs under pressure and “forcing young people to choose between their beliefs and their education”, he added.

READ ALSO: What’s in France’s new law to crack down on Islamist extremism?

“We call on the French authorities, and first of all President (Emmanuel) Macron, to act sensibly,” he continued. “We expect a rapid withdrawal of this bill.”

Erdogan also said he was ready to work with France on security issues and integration, but relations between the two leaders have been strained for some time.

France’s government is in the process of passing new legislation to crack down on what it has termed “Islamist separatism”, which would give the state more power to vet and disband religious groups judged to be threats to the nation.

Erdogan has already denounced the proposed measures as “anti-Muslim”.

READ ALSO: Has Macron succeeded in creating an ‘Islam for France’?

Last October, Erdogan questioned Macron’s “mental health”, accusing him of waging a “campaign of hatred” against Islam, after the French president defended the right of cartoonists to caricature the prophet Mohammed.

The two countries are also at odds on a number of other issues, including Libya, Syria and the eastern Mediterranean.

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