President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s lawyer has lodged a complaint against a former French diplomat accusing him of inciting the assassination of Turkey’s leader, his spokesman confirmed yesterday.
The move follows comments by Philippe Moreau Defarges about the outcome of the April 16 referendum on controversial constitutional changes that will tighten the president’s grip on power.
Defarges, now a senior fellow at the French Institute of International Relations (IFRI), said that all legal paths to challenge Erdogan had been shut off and that the only two options left were civil war or assassination.
The “yes” camp won the referendum with just over 51%, a narrower-than-expected victory, but Turkey’s top election board last week rejected opposition calls to annul it after complaints of vote-rigging.
Defarges told French broadcaster BFM on Saturday that Erdogan’s strengthened powers would lead “only to catastrophe”.
“There will either be a civil war or another scenario ... his assassination,” he said.
He later apologised for the comments.
Huseyin Aydin, a lawyer representing Erdogan, said in a petition to an Ankara prosecutor that the comments were not a simple expression of opinion, but were “clearly instigating the crime in question”, the state-run Anadolu news agency reported.
He said the comments showed how far the hostility against Erdogan had reached in the West, and suggested that Defarges should undergo checks for his mental health if he ever came to Turkey.
If found to be in good mental health, his alleged links with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) or US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen – blamed by Ankara for orchestrating the failed coup – should be investigated, Aydin said.
Erdogan’s spokesman Ibrahim Kalin confirmed the legal action, telling a press conference in Ankara: “We will do our best not to legitimise such fascist approaches.”
The comments went viral on social media, with a senior Erdogan adviser calling on the French institute to revoke Defarges’s fellowship.
“Former French diplomat openly calls for assassination of President Erdogan.@IFRI_ should terminate his fellowship, apologise,” Gulnur Aybet wrote on Twitter.
In a statement, the institute said Defarges spoke on a strictly personal basis, adding: “These comments do not represent IFRI in any way.”
Defarges apologised on Sunday, saying on Twitter: “Some of what I said was clumsy and might have been wrongly interpreted.”
But Kalin said the apology was “not enough”.
“This is not an issue that can be taken lightly,” he said. “This is a test for Europe. Let’s see how they will react.”
There have been numerous prosecutions for insulting Erdogan, with artists, journalists and schoolchildren all targeted.

Italian reporter freed after two-week detention
An Italian journalist who was detained in Turkey two weeks ago while doing research for a book was released yesterday and flown straight back to Italy.
Gabriele Del Grande was arrested on April 9 close to Turkey’s border with Syria.
His detention caused strains between Rome and Ankara, with Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano intervening directly to try to secure his release.
“I did not suffer any violence and not a hair on my head was touched,” Del Grande told reporters after arriving at Bologna airport, where he was met by Alfano. “(However) I was the victim of institutional violence and I believe what happened to me was illegal.”
Del Grande writes a blog Fortress Europe which focuses on efforts by migrants to reach Europe.
Turkey’s relations with Germany have also been strained by, among other things, the detention since February of a Turkish-German journalist accused by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of being a terrorist agent.
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, a press freedom group based in New York, at least 81 journalists were imprisoned in Turkey last year, many after a failed attempt by the military to topple Erdogan.


Related Story