World

EU vote on Turkey has 'no value,' country's president says

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday that a vote by the European Parliament on whether to halt EU membership talks with Ankara "has no value in our eyes" and again accused Europe of siding with terrorist organisations.

Western allies concerned with dismissals, detentions of thousands following July coup

Tayyip Erdogan has blamed the summertime coup on a Pennsylvania-based cleric and his followers within Turkey. (Sedat Suna/EPA)

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday that a vote by the European Parliament on whether to halt EU membership talks with Ankara "has no value in our eyes" and again accused Europe of siding with terrorist organisations.

"We have made clear time and time again that we take care of European values more than many EU countries, but we could not see concrete support from Western friends ... None of the promises were kept," he told a Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) conference in Istanbul.

"There will be a meeting at the European Parliament [Thursday], and they will vote on EU talks with Turkey whatever the result, this vote has no value in our eyes."

Leading members of the European Parliament on Tuesday called for a freezing of membership talks with Turkey because of its post-coup purges, in which more than 125,000 state employees have been dismissed or detained.

Soldiers, academics, judges, journalists and Kurdish leaders have also been among those detained or dismissed over their alleged backing for the putsch, in what opponents, rights groups and some Western allies say is an attempt to crush all dissent.

Erdogan said on Tuesday the measures had significantly weakened the network of U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, whose followers are accused of infiltrating state institutions over several decades and carrying out the coup attempt.

PKK-related grievance

Erdogan, and many Turks, were angered by the Western response to the putsch, viewing it as more concerned about the rights of the plotters than the gravity of the events themselves, in which more than 240 people were killed as rogue soldiers commandeered fighter jets and tanks.

He has also repeatedly accused Europe of harbouring members of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militant group, which has waged a three-decade insurgency against the Turkish state and is deemed a terrorist organisation by the EU and United States.

Erdogan is still seething over the presence of protesters sympathetic to the PKK near an EU-Turkey summit in Brussels in March, which he said at the time demonstrated the EU's "two-faced" behaviour.

"On one hand you declare the PKK a terrorist organization, on the other you have terrorists roaming freely in the streets of Brussels. What kind of sincerity is this?," he said on Wednesday.