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Armenia holds scholar from Duke over books

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  • Armenia holds scholar from Duke over books

    Armenia holds scholar from Duke over books

    News & Observer, NC
    June 18 2005

    YEREVAN, ARMENIA -- A Duke University researcher was detained at
    Yerevan airport Friday on suspicion of smuggling antique books out
    of Armenia, the National Security Service said.

    An official for the security agency, speaking on condition of
    anonymity, said Turkish citizen Yektan Turkyilmaz had been arrested
    in possession of books dating from the 17th to 20th centuries and
    was suspected of seeking to take them secretly on a flight to Turkey.

    Turkyilmaz, of Duke University in Durham, is likely to be fined
    although the offense he is accused of carries a maximum five-year
    jail term, the official said.

    Books older than 50 years cannot be taken out of Armenia without
    special permission. Turkyilmaz was in Armenia to carry out research in
    the Armenian national archives, the first Turk to be allowed to do so.

    Turkyilmaz is a doctoral student in Duke's cultural anthropology
    department, according to the department's Web site. His dissertation
    is on the effects of geography and nationhood on Turkey's society.

    Turkyilmaz, a Duke student for five years, is researching the early
    part of the 20th century in Turkey and Armenia, said Orin Starn, a
    professor in Duke's cultural anthropology department who is a friend
    and adviser to Turkyilmaz.

    Starn cast doubt on the accusations that Turkyilmaz, a Turkish citizen
    of Kurdish heritage, tried to smuggle books out of Armenia.

    Turkyilmaz's work includes research on the killings of Armenians,
    a delicate subject in both countries, Starn said. The first Turk
    to gain access to the Armenian national archives, Turkyilmaz had
    approached his work on the tense period of history as a scholar.

    "He's been a bridge builder," Starn said.

    No one at Duke or in Turkyilmaz's family in Turkey has made contact
    with him, causing concern.

    "My fear is that he has been caught in the middle of an explosive,
    long-running conflict," Starn said.

    Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations because of a
    dispute over the killings of Armenians during World War I, which
    Armenians say was genocide.

    Armenians say some 1.5 million of their people were killed as the
    Ottoman Empire forced them from eastern Turkey between 1915 and 1923
    in a deliberate campaign of genocide.

    Turkey says the death count is inflated and insists that Armenians
    were killed or displaced in the civil unrest during the collapse of
    the Ottoman Empire.
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