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Duke grad student detained in Armenia

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  • Duke grad student detained in Armenia

    Durham Herald Sun, NC
    July 11 2005

    Duke grad student detained in Armenia



    BY PAUL BONNER : The Herald-Sun
    [email protected]
    Jul 11, 2005 : 10:57 pm ET

    DURHAM -- Duke University doctoral student Yektan Turkyilmaz is
    something of a rarity in the chronically uneasy relationship between
    Turkey and neighboring Armenia: a Turkish historian accepted by
    Armenians as impartial.

    Which makes it seem all the more odd to his Duke associates, friends
    and family that after allowing him to conduct research at Armenia's
    national archives -- reportedly the first Turk ever to do so --
    Armenian authorities have detained him for more than three weeks.

    Despite pleas from Duke administrators and others, Turkyilmaz remains
    in a legal limbo. Although he has not been charged, he ran afoul of
    an Armenian law that makes it a crime to take any book more than 50
    years old out of the country without permission.

    While researching in Armenia, Turkyilmaz bought several second-hand
    books from street vendors, said his adviser, Duke professor Orin
    Starn.

    Turkyilmaz had finished a six-week stint at the Armenian archives in
    the capital city of Yerevan, the last leg of travels that also have
    taken him to Paris and Ankara, Turkey, for his dissertation on Turkey
    and the surrounding region in the early 20th century. He was pulled
    off a departing plane at Yerevan's airport on June 17 and held by
    Armenia's National Security Service.

    He has not been allowed to communicate with his family in Turkey or
    with Duke associates, although he now has a lawyer, Starn said. The
    lawyer has relayed word that Turkyilmaz is in good health and says he
    has not been mistreated, said Starn, who has communicated with
    Turkyilmaz's sister in Istanbul.

    "We're deeply concerned about the situation," Starn said.

    Most of the books were from the 20th century, although one was
    published in the 17th century, Starn said. If Turkyilmaz had declared
    the books at the airport, he would have been allowed to keep them,
    Starn said.

    "None of these books, according to the lawyer, are rare books,
    ancient manuscripts, national treasures or anything like that," Starn
    said. "I'm certain that Yektan didn't know of the existence of that
    law. Who would?"

    Turk-Armenian relations still smolder over what Armenians say was
    genocide against them by Turkey in the early 20th century. Turkey
    disputes the extent of civilian deaths and denies any policy of
    genocide.

    Turkyilmaz, who belongs to the Kurdish ethnic group, speaks Armenian
    well, and is acknowledged by the head of Armenia's national archives
    as "an impartial writer," the AZG Armenian Daily newspaper reported.

    "That's what's paradoxical about this situation," Starn said.

    Armenian claims of genocide are "something of a taboo subject" in
    Turkey, he said. "And Yektan is one of the relatively few scholars
    who have spoken out and called for the need for more dialogue and
    understanding about what happened back then," Starn said.

    The 33-year-old student in Duke's department of cultural anthropology
    is a "brilliant" and well-liked researcher, for whom Turkish,
    Armenian and English are just three of the seven languages he speaks,
    Starn said. He is scheduled to return this month to Duke, where he is
    a John Hope Franklin fellow for the coming academic year.

    Top Duke administrative officials have urged his release, and U.S.
    Rep. David Price's office has asked the U.S. State Department and
    Armenian Embassy to investigate.

    http://www.herald-sun.com/durham/4-625579.html
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