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Turkey 'planning more rallies in Germany' despite row, says foreign minister

Turkey and Germany have been at loggerheads this week after local authorities blocked several rallies by Turkish ministers.

Turkey is planning more rallies in Germany over a disputed referendum, despite a row with Berlin over the issue

Mevlut Cavusoglu said he had already handed a list of the planned rallies to his German counterpart Sigmar Gabriel.

"We expect Germany to solve this problem. We are planning around 30 rallies. We had informed German authorities of them all," said the minister in quotes carried by private CNN-Turk television.

On Sunday, Erdogan poured oil on the fire, telling a rally in Istanbul that the blocking of public appearances by his ministers was "not different from the Nazi practices of the past".

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Chancellor Angela Merkel hit back earlier Thursday at the Turkish leader's Nazi jibe as "sad" and "depressing."

Cavusoglu stressed it was "out of the question" for Turkey to call the German government Nazi.

"This is a very sensitive issue. We are not calling the current administration Nazi," he said, clarifying that the current bans "unavoidably remind us the practices during that (Nazi) period."

Cavusoglu also said that politicians and the German media had referred to Erdogan as a "dictator."

Turkish politicians are keen to harness votes in Germany, home to a massive Turkish community, ahead of an April 16 referendum on whether to create an executive presidency in Turkey.

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Aside from the recent row, ties between the NATO allies have been strained over Turkey's human rights record, and press freedom since the failed coup in July last year that sought to unseat Erdogan.

"Mrs Merkel is right, we have profound disagreements on some issues. For example the fight against terror," presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin told reporters in Ankara.

Kalin accused Germany of "opening its door to those leading the 'No' campaign in the referendum including the PKK and other terror organisations," referring to Kurdish militants.

The spokesman also criticised other European countries like Austria where Chancellor Christian Kern has called for a ban on Turkish politicians from politically campaigning across the EU.

"We have a very clear message: don't work in vain, the people will decide, not you," Kalin said.

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