Turkey probes tweet by Dutch far-right chief Wilders

Turkey probes tweet by Dutch far-right chief Wilders
The Dutch anti-Islam MP tweeted an image of President Erdogan showing the left side of his face, bearded and darker-skinned, against the black-and-white flag of the Islamic State extremist group.
2 min read
16 February, 2021
Wilders captioned the image "Terrorist" in a tweet that received thousands of likes [Getty]

Turkish prosecutors on Tuesday launched an investigation into Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders over a tweet in which he wrote "terrorist" accompanying an image of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Wilders tweeted an image on Monday of Erdogan, with the right side of his face depicted against a Turkish flag, and the left side - bearded and darker-skinned - against the black-and-white flag of the Islamic State extremist group.

He wrote the word "Terrorist" over the image, which was shared and liked thousands of times.

The Ankara chief public prosecutor's office said it was opening a probe into the "photograph and written insult about" Erdogan.

This is not the first time anti-Islam MP Wilders has outraged Ankara.

Erdogan filed a complaint in October after Wilders shared a cartoon of him wearing an Ottoman hat shaped like a bomb with a lit fuse on Twitter and the word "Terrorist".

Read also: Turkey threatens lawsuit over Charlie Hebdo caricature of Erdogan

The Turkish president's top press aide, Fahrettin Altun, dismissed Wilders' comments.

"No word that Geert Wilders and his merry band of neo-Nazis ever uttered has amounted to anything. The real danger is that seemingly moderate governments and ostensibly responsible policymakers in Europe seem to concur," Altun tweeted on Tuesday.

Erdogan's spokesman, Ibrahim Kalin, late Monday tweeted a photo of Wilders scrunching his face while pushing a pen against the tip of his nose, accompanied by the word "Imbecile".

Ankara and The Hague have had tense relations, especially after Turkish ministers were banned from campaigning among Turkish nationals living in the Netherlands during Turkey's constitutional referendum campaign in 2017.

Follow us on FacebookTwitter and Instagram to stay connected