Turks In Germany Sharply Divided Over Turkey's Referendum

For weeks, advocates and opponents of the referendum have campaigned determinedly across Germany, handing out flyers in front of mosques and trying to persuade fellow Turks in emotional debates at tea rooms or kebab restaurants. Thousands have also attended campaign rallies with politicians flown in from Turkey — whose cancellation in some cities prompted Erdogan's remarks about "Nazi methods." Ayfer Inci-Pekoz stood in the pouring rain for hours, clad in a neon-yellow vest with the Turkish slogan "Berlin hayir diyor (Berlin says no)," handing out flyers in front of a Turkish grocery market in the city's bustling Neukoelln neighborhood. Inci-Pekoz, a Turkish-born real estate agent who now has German citizenship herself and can't vote, shrugged and turned to two veiled young mothers with strollers. A yes' vote in the referendum would grant the president the power to appoint government ministers and senior officials, appoint half of the members in the country's highest judicial body, declare states of emergency and issue decrees. "People here almost feel guilty if they want to vote 'Yes,'" said Akkaya, sipping tea and smoking cigarettes with friends on both sides of the referendum debate in a cafe in Berlin's Kreuzberg district, where many Turkish immigrants live.

Topics:  germany   turks   thousands   turkey   erdogan   nazi   ayfer inci-pekoz    berlin   neukoelln   inci-pekoz   turkish-born   people   akkaya   berlin's kreuzberg   german   a   turkish   berlin   referendum   vote   flyers   front   

 

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