The EU has called on Turkey to revise its terrorism laws as a condition for allowing Turkish citizens to travel to Europe without visas on short stays.
Erdogan has been pressing for the contrary: a broader definition of terrorism at a time when the country is facing the twin threats of renewed conflict with Kurdish militants in the southeast and growing blowback from the conflict in Syria in the form or IS-linked bombings and rocket attacks.
Erdogan was referring to the Kurdistan Worker's Party, which has waged a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state and is designated by Ankara and its allies as a terrorist organization.
Its symbols, Turkish officials say, have been spotted recently at demonstrations and in tents outside the European Parliament.
"You will allow terrorists to set up tents, say you are doing it in the name of democracy, and then tell us to change our terrorism law for visas," said Erdogan.
His statement came a day after Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who had negotiated the deal, stepped down over a rift with the president.
The premier's resignation is perceived to the outcome of his divergence with the president on key questions including the possibility of resuming peace talks with Kurdish militants, press freedom, and more crucially, his lukewarm support toward reshaping Turkey into a presidential system.
"In order to be strong, we need to rapidly present a presidential system which is the guarantee of stability and trust to the approval of the people," Erdogan said.
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