
ANKARA (AFP) -
Turkey
summoned Germany's ambassador to protest a two-minute song lampooning
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that was broadcast on German television, a
diplomatic source told AFP on Tuesday.
"We summoned the
ambassador last week to communicate our protest about the broadcast that
we condemned," the source told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"We demanded that the broadcast is removed from the air."
German
regional television NDR on March 17 broadcast the sardonic song --
"Erdowie, Erdowo, Erdogan" -- ridiculing the Turkish president, his
alleged extravagant spending and crackdown on civil liberties.
"A
journalist who writes something that Erdogan does not like/ Is tomorrow
already in jail," said the lyrics to the song, which was broadcast on
the "extra 3" television show.
Alluding to the government's
military crackdown against the banned Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), it
goes on to say: "He hates the Kurds like the plague/ And prefers to
bomb them rather than the religious brothers from Islamic State."
The
government vehemently denies that the crackdown targets Turkey's
Kurdish minority, saying it is only aimed at wiping out "terrorists".
Erdogan's
government has been accused by critics of authoritarianism and muzzling
critical media as well as lawmakers, academics, lawyers and
non-government groups.
EU heavyweight Germany sees Turkey as main
partner in tackling a wave of refugees landing at Europe's borders, with
Chancellor Angela Merkel saying Brussels wants Ankara's help on the
issue.
But Merkel has also said it will stick to its values and keep insisting on civil and minority rights in Turkey.
German
news weekly Der Spiegel said this month it had to withdraw its Istanbul
correspondent and charged that Turkey was violating the freedom of the
press.
Several diplomats from EU member states, including the
German envoy, last week attended the trial of two journalists facing
espionage charges, drawing the ire of Erdogan who accused the diplomats
of overstepping their powers.
Using a hugely controversial legal
article, almost 2,000 people have been prosecuted for "insulting"
Erdogan since the former premier became president in August 2014.
© 2016 AFP
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