NZ foreign minister headed to Turkey to 'confront' Erdogan's mosque shooting comments

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on
Wednesday Foreign Minister Winston Peters will travel to Turkey to “confront”
comments made by Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on the killing of at least 50
people at mosques in Christchurch.
Australian Brenton Tarrant, 28, a suspected white
supremacist, was charged with murder on Saturday after a lone gunman opened
fire at the two mosques during Friday prayers.
Erdogan - who is seeking to drum up support for his
Islamist-rooted AK Party in March 31 local elections - said Turkey would make
the suspected attacker pay if New Zealand did not.
The comments came at a campaign rally that included
video footage of the shootings which the alleged gunman had broadcast on
Facebook.
Ardern said Peters would seek urgent clarification.
“Our deputy prime minister will be confronting those
comments in Turkey,” Ardern told reporters in Christchurch. “He is going there
to set the record straight, face-to-face.”
Peters had earlier condemned the airing of footage
of the shooting, which he said could endanger New Zealander’s aboard.
Despite Peters’ intervention, an extract from
Tarrant’s alleged manifesto was flashed up on a screen at Erdogan’s rally again
on Tuesday, along with footage of the gunman entering one of the mosques and
shooting as he approached the door.
Meanwhile, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison
said he summoned Turkey’s ambassador for a meeting, during which he demanded
Erdogan’s comments be removed from Turkey’s state broadcaster.
“I will wait to see what the response is from the
Turkish government before taking further action, but I can tell you that all
options are on the table,” Morrison told reporters in Canberra.
Morrison said Australia’s ambassador to Turkey will
on Wednesday meet with the members of Erdogan’s government.
Morrison said Canberra is also reconsidering its
travel advice for Australians planning trips to Turkey.
Relations between Turkey, New Zealand and Australia
have generally been good. Thousands of Australians and New Zealanders travel
each year to Turkey for war memorial services.
Just over a century ago, thousands of soldiers from
the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) struggled ashore on a narrow
beach at Gallipoli during an ill-fated campaign that would claim more than
130,000 lives.
The area has become a site of pilgrimage for
visitors who honor their nations’ fallen in graveyards halfway around the world
on ANZAC Day every April 25.