Merkel on Monday criticised the crackdown as "much too strong." The chancellor has long been skeptical of Turkey's ambitions to join the European Union; her coalition government supports continuing membership talks but this week blocked a decision to move forward the negotiations.
Egemen Bagis, Turkey's minister in charge of EU affairs, said yesterday that if Merkel is looking for "internal political material" ahead of Germany's September elections "this should not be Turkey." He also pointed to the election defeat last year of then-French President Nicolas Sarkozy, a fellow opponent of Turkish EU membership.
German Foreign Ministry spokesman Andreas Peschke told reporters that ambassador Huseyin Avni Karslioglu was summoned to the ministry today.
He would say only that the reason was comments by a Turkish official regarding Germany and the future of the EU membership talks, adding: "These are comments that met with incomprehension this is not in order."
But yesterday, Germany and the Netherlands blocked a decision to do so.
That chapter concerns regional policies, not Turkey's protests. Asked whether the decision to block its opening was linked to the Turkish crackdown, Peschke said it was down to "open technical questions" on which he wouldn't elaborate. However, he added that "of course, as always in life, everything is linked to everything else."
Human rights groups have said the protests in Turkey have left more than 5,000 people injured and more than 3,000 were detained, then released.
