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The French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which satirizes the Turkish president with a sketch of the Turkish president on the cover of its new issue, fuels the fire of the Erdogan-Paris confrontation.
The sketch shows Tayyip Erdogan sitting in an armchair in a T-shirt and underwear, his tongue sticking out. She holds a soda in one hand while lifting the clothes of a Muslim woman who is not wearing underwear with the other. “Oh! The prophet!” It is represented as saying the Turkish president. The title of the cover reads “Erdogan. In his private life, he’s funny.”
Rabies in Ankara
Ankara’s first cold reaction of anger, and not at all, came from the Turkish Deputy Minister of Culture, Serdar Kam, who wrote on Twitter: “Charlie Hebdo: you are bastards. You are children of dogs.”
Charlie Hebdo:@Charlie_Hebdo
You are bastards.
You are sons of bitches.– Dr. Serdar Çam (@serdar_cam) October 27, 2020
Turkey-France relations have come to an end
The satire comes at a time when relations between France and Turkey are strained, with Erdogan urging Muslims to impose an embargo on French products and France urging the EU to take action against Ankara at the next summit.
Europe as a whole condemned Erdogan’s insults against Macron, while the Commission warned Ankara against boycotting French products.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte directed a particularly strict style at Tayyip Erdogan following the lawsuit brought by the Turkish president against the Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders for a satirical sketch he posted on Twitter.
“I have a message for President Erdogan and it is very simple: in the Netherlands, we regard freedom of expression as the highest good and that includes sketches, including political sketches,” Rutte said.
Source: skai.gr
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