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Bulgaria bans AKP deputy from entering the country

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As tension between Ankara and Sofia over the role of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government in upcoming Bulgarian elections persists, it has been revealed that the Bulgarian government had last week declared an AKP deputy unwelcome in Bulgaria, DHA reported on Saturday.

According to the story the Bulgarian government announced that AKP deputy Aziz Babuşçu and Ulvi Ata, serving on the religious attaché desk at the Turkish Embassy in Sofia, were prohibited from entering Bulgaria on the same day that İbrahim Tarhanacı, who works for the Edirne Governor’s Office, was detained and later deported from the country.

Giving the Bulgarian media as its source, the DHA report said Babuşçu and Ata were put on a banned-entry list for their activities supporting Lyutvi Mestan’s DOST party. Since Babuşçu and Ata were in Turkey when the decision was taken, they were put on a list of foreigners not allowed into Bulgaria.

Bulgarian nationalists blocked border checkpoints with Turkey on Friday to stop buses carrying ethnic Turks who are Bulgarian citizens to vote in Sunday’s election amid growing tension between the two neighbors.

According to Reuters, about a hundred supporters of the nationalist coalition United Patriots blocked the main checkpoint at Kapitan Andreevo-Kapıkule and vowed to stay until the end of the vote. Bulgarian nationalists also chanted slogans “Hands off Bulgaria” and “No to electoral tourism.”

On Thursday Bulgarian President Rumen Radev slammed remarks made by his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who criticized the Bulgarian government for “putting pressure” on expatriate Turks, saying his country would not accept democracy lessons from Turkey.

Radev said, “Bulgaria does not give, but also does not accept lessons in democracy, especially from countries that do not respect the rule of law,” during a press conference on Thursday,

Underlining that he wants the elections in Bulgaria to proceed smoothly, he also said Bulgaria is a European country “that follows its laws, not others’ emotions.”

Earlier on Thursday, Erdoğan criticized Bulgaria for “putting pressure” on expatriate Turks, Bulgaria’s largest ethic minority, ahead of a vote on March 26.

Last week, Bulgarian Ambassador to Turkey Nadejda Neynski was reportedly recalled to Sofia for consultations over Turkey’s interference in Bulgaria’s upcoming election.

According to local media, Bulgaria decided to recall its ambassador to Turkey after the Turkish ambassador in Sofia, Süleyman Gökçe, was summoned by the Bulgarian Foreign Ministry on March 6 over reports that Turkish officials called on Bulgarian-Turks in Bulgaria to vote for Lyutvi Mestan’s DOST party.

Bulgarian media also reported that Ambassador Gökçe appeared in a campaign video for DOST.

A statement from the Bulgarian Foreign Ministry on Friday did not include any reason for recalling Neynski to Sofia; however, Bulgarian government officials expressed concern over Turkey’s “meddling in Bulgaria’s elections” by encouraging Bulgarian-Turks in Turkey – about 60,000 people – to vote for DOST in the March 26 elections and defined this as a “direct intervention in Bulgaria’s domestic politics.”

Bulgaria’s ethnic Turks are estimated to number more than half a million in a population of 7.2 million. More than 400,000 Bulgarian nationals live in Turkey, most of them Bulgarian Turks descended from Ottoman-era Turkish settlers in the Balkans.

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