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Istanbul: Should one worry about security on the Princes' Islands?

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  • Istanbul: Should one worry about security on the Princes' Islands?

    Lraper Church Bulletin 07/08/2005
    Contact: Deacon Vagharshag Seropyan
    Armenian Patriarchate
    TR-34130 Kumkapi, Istanbul
    T: +90 (212) 517-0970, 517-0971
    F: +90 (212) 516-4833, 458-1365
    [email protected]

    SHOULD ONE WORRY ABOUT SECURITY ON THE PRINCES' ISLANDS?
    (assorted from various news despatches)
    www.lraper.org <http://www.lraper.org/> (English page)

    The population of the Metropolitan Istanbul area, together with its
    outlying suburbs, is said to have reached around 16 million people.

    During the hot and humid summer months, it is only natural that the
    masses prefer to spend their weekend holidays by the sea. The shores
    of the Bosporus, the nearby Black Sea and Marmara Sea resorts and
    especially the Princes' Islands, always had Sunday visitors.

    However, it seems that things have changed for the worse during the
    last two years since Coskun Ozden, the Mayor of the Princes' Islands,
    switched political parties.

    Newspapers have been reporting that fundamentalist summer camps
    have been founded on Buyuk and Heybeli Islands. An article in the
    Cumhuriyet Daily relates that liberal Turkish women wearing regular
    one piece swimming suits were spat upon by fundamentalist women with
    headscarves. This is alarming news for the Princes' Islands which
    are traditionally inhabited mostly by liberal and secularist Turkish
    islanders, and Armenian, Syriac, Jewish and Greek minority community
    members. The Mayor recently defended himself saying, "Our citizens
    belonging to minority communities have summer camps on Kinali Island,
    why shouldn't our Muslim citizens enjoy their own?" The Mayor was
    forgetting, of course, that the Greek or Armenian children's camps,
    since their days of foundation, have never caused any discomfort to
    the islanders.

    There are widespread rumours in the city that, in order to gain
    political support before the next nation-wide elections, certain
    municipalities with ultra-nationalist and religious fundamentalist
    constituencies are purposely distributing free seabus and ferry tokens,
    directing the provincial masses in the slum areas of the city to
    the Princes' Islands on weekends. Many of these people have not been
    schooled in an urban metropolitan society and most of them lack regular
    beach manners. For example, it is now possible to see sunbathers
    and swimmers on the Islands, men and women, going about freely in
    their regular white underwear rather than swimming suits. One would
    wonder what the Mayor of the Princes' Islands or the Prime Minister
    of Turkey would do if their family members were approached by people
    in their wet, obscene white underwear? The islanders have also been
    complaining about the rising number of weekend visitors who publicly
    utter derrogatory remarks against the non-Muslim minorities.

    Another problem is the lack of public facilities on the Princes'
    Islands. Masses who visit the Islands during the weekends litter
    and pollute the sea, the seaside, the green park areas and even the
    gardens of private houses since the public toilets on the Islands do
    not suffice. Weekend crowds have even begun to knock on the doors of
    private houses demanding to use the toilet and shower facilities of
    the islanders.

    One man said that, early in the morning, he went to buy a newspaper
    from the paper kiosk by the pier and was shocked to see that some
    thirty non-residents were sleeping on the pavements and had clearly
    been there through the night.

    These impressions now widely shared by the media and the islanders
    cause security concerns. There have been many street fights since
    the beginning of the summer season, and at least twice policemen have
    been also attacked. On Sunday 31 July, during another street fight,
    a policeman thought he had to fire in the air to calm down a group of
    non-residents and, attacked by someone nearby, he wounded a bystander.
    The Marmara Armenian daily asked in its front page article on 1 August
    whether residents should not worry about their security, since even
    the armed units have begun to feel insecure.

    Whether these concerns are exaggerated or not, time will show. However,
    the Governor's office, the Mayor of the Princes' Islands and concerned
    business circles clearly need to work out and implement a joint
    project to create new facilities and perhaps to designate new, free
    beach areas on the Princes' Islands for the non-residents who invade
    the Islands during weekends.
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