Turkey’s Erdoğan criticised for holding banquet during pandemic
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
held a banquet with live music for Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa El-Kazımi,
drawing criticism from critical news websites and social media users.
“Everywhere is closed, everywhere is quarantined,
but there’s a song and dance at the Palace,” the Tele1 website reported.
On Thursday Erdoğan
held a ceremony with the Iraqi leader to sign new agreements and the dinner
following this event was attended by dozens of people who were sitting at
tables. Turkey mandates lockdowns across the country on Sundays and announced
it will impose another ban for outings before the New Year’s Eve. Citizens face
relatively high penalties if they are caught outside or without masks on but at
the palace party, invitees appeared not to be socially distancing.
According to the pro-government Sabah newspaper, a
“memorandum of understanding was signed between the two countries on the
prevention of double taxation in income tax and the prevention of tax evasion.”
President Erdoğan
stated that “everybody
knows the importance our neighbor Iraq attaches to the protection of political
unity and territorial integrity, stability and security. We are ready to make
all kinds of contributions within the framework of the reconstruction of Iraq.”
French news site L’Orient reported that Erdoğan
pressed Iraq to cooperate in removing the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) from
northern Iraq, but “Mr
Erdoğan
repeated over and over that his country intends to "deal" with the
PKK in northern Iraq if Baghdad was "not in a position to do so".
Two days before the banquet, a debate erupted in the
Turkish parliament where Republican People’s Party (CHP) deputy Engin Altay
complained about poverty and hunger in Turkey. AKP deputy Şahin
Tin responded that people could eat “dry bread” and that means there is no hunger.
Some Turkish social media users questioned why
guests at the banquet were not socially distancing when the pandemic is
currently not under control in Turkey.
Others also wondered whether the guests at Erdoğan’s table could be seen
drinking Turkey’s national alcoholic drink Raki. Turkish authorities recently
banned the sale of alcohol in major cities at night and on weekends.



