German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas on Monday described verbal attacks by the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan against French President Emmanuel Macron as “a new low.”

At a press conference held jointly with the leader of the Atomic Energy Agency, Maas said that the German government was standing in solidarity with its European neighbor in the “fight against Islamist extremism.”

Erdogan caused an uproar over the weekend by telling the French president to have his mental state checked. He also accused Macron of Islamophobia after the French leader defended the publication of controversial cartoons depicting the Muslim Prophet Muhammad.

France condemned the Turkish president’s comments and recalled its ambassador from Ankara in response.

“We have great understanding for their diplomatic measures and we support them,” said Maas in a reference to France’s reaction.

Read more: Opinion: France’s difficult struggle against Islamism

Erdogan responded again on Monday by calling for a boycott of French goods. Some shops in Jordan, Kuwait and Qatar had already removed French products from their shelves in protest.

“We see that, especially in European countries, hostility towards Islam and Muslims is spreading like a plague in society,” Erdogan said on Monday.

European solidarity against Islamist extremism

The German foreign minister stressed that while there were “millions of honest citizens of Muslim faith” in Germany and across Europe, it was wrong to conflate the battle against violence-prone Islamists and general Islamophobia.

“Anyone who simply equates these real problems with racism and Islamophobia, is acting irresponsibly and is playing into the hands of those who want to divide our society,” Maas said.

Read more: As France mourns slain teacher Samuel Paty, some question

French President Emmanuel Macron at the memorial service in Paris for slain teacher Samuel Paty

Macron had said France would “not give up its cartoons,” after the brutal murder of a teacher in Paris who had displayed the images in his classroom. The president emphasized that France would not give up its right to free speech.

His comments that Islam was in a “crisis” triggered protests around the world. Pakistan summoned the French ambassador to voice anger over the comments, while protesters gathered in Bangladesh calling Macron the “enemy of peace.”

ab/rt (AFP, dpa, Reuters)

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