In April 2016 Kaplan received criticism because he had connections to
extreme Islamists in
Turkey. In particular he met the Swedish leader Ilhan Sentürk of the Turkish nationalist group the
Grey Wolves and Barbaros Leylani, deputy chair of the National Turkish Association in Sweden, who said a few days earlier that "those Armenian dogs must die", or, that Turks must "kill the Armenian dogs," On 17 April,
Svenska Dagbladet published a video on which Kaplan compares
Israel's treatment of Palestinians to
Nazi Germany's treatment of Jewish people. On 18 April the Swedish national public TV broadcaster
SVT reported about Kaplan having close ties with the Turkish regime of
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and that this was a part of a Turkish strategy to influence foreign governments. The two journalists from SVT said they had been researching Kaplan's connection with the Turkish
AKP party for months and published some of their material prematurely when the affair suddenly exploded in the media. These cases raised questions in Sweden about the stance of Kaplan concerning extremism. On 18 April 2016, Kaplan resigned as
cabinet minister. Several additional controversies with connections to Islamism in the Green Party occurred in the week following Kaplan's resignation which SVT's commentator called one of the party's worst crisis ever. ==References==