The demonstration in Helsinki was organized by pro-Kurdish “anti-authoritarian” activists
A group of protesters burned a portrait of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in front of his nation’s embassy in Helsinki over the weekend, the Finnish media reported on Wednesday.
Four people ended up being arrested during what turned out to be a chaotic event, the chief inspector of the Helsinki Police Department, Heikki Porola, told journalists.
The individuals, who have since been released, failed to comply with lawful orders by officers, he said. There were some 20 demonstrators on the scene, the official reported. Burning an image of an identifiable person may constitute an offense, Porola added.
The demonstration, which was held on Sunday, was organized by a self-described “anti-authoritarian group” called A-ryhma (Group A), which shared photos of the act on its Twitter account. The group stated that the action was meant to support Kurdistan and protest “the NATO membership process, where Sweden and Finland compete to whitewash Türkiye’s war crimes and make plans together to suppress the justified opposition to it.” The group claimed that police “responded aggressively” to their actions, using pepper spray against one participant.
Last year, Türkiye dampened the aspirations of Finland and Sweden of joining NATO by accusing them of harboring “terrorists” from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and other associated groups. It also stated that the Nordic nations were undermining its national security with arms export bans.
A trilateral agreement, which was signed in June and meant to address Ankara’s complaints, resulted in a lifting of the bans but has so far failed to resolve the situation fully. The group behind the protests on Sunday wants the trade restrictions to be reinstated.
Ankara perceives Kurdish militias in Syria and Iraq as a threat, stating they are allied with the Türkiye-based PPK, which waged a lengthy guerilla war against the Turkish government. The Turkish military has conducted several cross-border operations against Kurds in the past decade.
There have been several anti-Turkish protests recently in light of Ankara’s roadblocks to NATO membership for Finland and Sweden. In January, Kurdish protesters torched an Erdogan effigy in Stockholm, prompting complaints from the Turkish government.
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Another protest in Sweden in the same month, in which a right-wing activist burned a Koran in front of the Turkish embassy, seriously damaged Stockholm’s relations with Ankara and resulted in the Turkish government indicating that it would not back Sweden’s bid.
Finland said it may have to proceed with NATO accession without Sweden, even though the two applicants filed their bids jointly and sought to join the US-led bloc together.