Let’s send 15,000 migrants a month to Europe to shock them: Turkish interior minister

Let’s send 15,000 migrants a month to Europe to shock them: Turkish interior minister

ANKARA
Let’s send 15,000 migrants a month to Europe to shock them: Turkish interior minister

AA photo

Turkish Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu has said Turkey could send 15,000 refugees to Europe to shock the Europeans following a recent diplomatic crisis between Ankara and Germany and the Netherlands that stemmed from the latter’s decision to bar Turkish ministers from staging rallies there. 

“We have a readmission deal. I’m telling you Europe, do you have that courage? If you want, we’ll send the 15,000 refugees to you that we don’t send each month and blow your mind. You have to keep in mind that you can’t design a game in this region in spite of Turkey,” Soylu said at an event late on March 16, referring to a readmission deal between the European Union and Turkey to return migrants to Turkey who have illegally crossed the Aegean Sea to Greece. 

As part of the agreement, Greek officials are obliged to return refugees trying to reach Western European countries via Greece and return them to Turkey.

Soylu said Germany and the Netherlands were trying to complete what they could not accomplish during the Gezi Park protests, the December 2013 graft probes – which targeted figures close to the government and resulted in lasting enmity between the Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the followers of the U.S.-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen – and the July 2016 failed coup attempt, which is widely believed to have been masterminded by the Fethullahist Terrorist Organization (FETÖ).

“Who are the main ones trying to get things done? Germany and the Netherlands. Are the elections going to be held in Germany? Will the charter change in Germany or the Netherlands?” he said, referring to the April 16 referendum that will decide whether the current parliamentary system should be replaced by an executive presidency with vastly enhanced powers for President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

“This is our internal issue. What do you care? Why are you getting involved in it? Did you accept Turkey into the European Union? Did you provide support to Turkey in its fight against terrorism?” he said.

“There are games being played against Turkey in order to prevent it from becoming strong in the future,” Soylu also said.

Claiming that Turkey had been subjected to multilayered games for many years, Soylu said  FETÖ, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) were trying to destroy love and fraternity.

He also said the Turkish Republic was in its strongest period and that “some people can’t handle it,” adding that per capita income had increased during this period. 

During his speech, Soylu said the constitutional amendments would bring a system that “doesn’t produce words, but actions.”