Turkey and The Netherlands have been locked in a bitter dispute after The Hague stopped Turkish government ministers from addressing rallies to win support for a new constitution that would expand President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's powers in an April 16 referendum.
The sources said charge d'affaires Daan Feddo Huisinga was presented with two notes addressed to the Dutch government in which Ankara said it expected a written apology and accused The Hague of breaching the Vienna Convention on diplomacy.
Huisinga was first summoned yesterday afternoon, shortly after the Dutch government refused to let Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu land in The Netherlands after he threatened sanctions if he were not allowed to come.
The envoy was again summoned today after Turkish Family Minister Fatma Betul Sayan Kaya was expelled from The Netherlands and escorted back to Germany by Dutch police.
In the note, Turkey hit back at the treatment of Kaya and her delegation, saying it was a violation of the Vienna Convention.
It also said it reserved the right to compensation while calling for an investigation into the "violations" and for the prosecution of those responsible for such "infringements".
The second note criticised the "disproportionate" treatment by security forces against "people using their right to peacefully gather together", referring to the protest outside the Rotterdam consulate yesterday.
After hours of calm protests, police officers moved in against over 1,000 people gathered near the Turkish consulate, charging on horseback and using dogs to disperse the crowd.
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