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Turkey furious at axeing of Swedish coup panel

Turkey has angrily reacted to the cancellation of a panel in Sweden about the failed July coup attempt seeking to oust the government from power, calling it a "blow" to the freedom of expression.

Turkey furious at axeing of Swedish coup panel
Turkish people attempt to stop tanks in Ankara on July 16, 2016. Photo: TT
The panel “July 15th — Behind the Scene of the Bloody Coup” had been planned to take place in Stockholm on Friday.
   
The office of the Turkish prime minister, in a statement late on Friday, condemned the cancellation and said it was the result of “interference by some Swedish parliamentarians.”
   
“The cancellation of the panel planned to inform the international community on the treacherous coup attempt of July 15 against Turkey's democracy and parliamentarian system, and the prevention of Turkish
journalists from making a statement contradicts with Sweden's tradition as the country with the world's oldest piece of legislation on the freedom of media,” the statement said.
   
The panel should have taken place in a small school of a Stockholm district. Local authorities claim they cancelled the event because of security concerns.
   
“We did a risk assessment taking into account who would attend and what  could happen outside. I don't want my schools turned into a battlefield,” Bo Andersson, a Stockholm city schools official, said.
   
The Swedish foreign ministry has not commented. Turkey has blamed the failed putsch on a rogue group in the army led by US-based Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen, charges he denies.
   
The government has launched a relentless crackdown on alleged coup plotters, detaining or suspending tens of thousands of people from state institutions including in education.
   
The purge has alarmed European states, which have urged Turkey to act within the rule of law.
   
Furious with the cancellation of the planned event in Stockholm, Ankara said it expected “the European countries, which unfairly criticise Turkey for hindering the freedom of the press at every opportunity, to show the necessary
reaction to these attacks on the freedom of media and expression by Sweden.”

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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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