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  • ANKARA: Armenian workers may boost Turkey's hand in foreign policy

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 10 2009

    Armenian workers may boost Turkey's hand in foreign policy


    Illegal immigrants (rear) wait at a police station in
    Ä°stanbul. Analysts suggest an estimated 40,000 to 100,000
    Armenian expatriates live in Turkey.

    `Un-hate a Turk Today' said the banner raised on April 24, 1969, a day
    Armenians commemorate mass suffering endured during World War I, in
    front of the St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral in Manhattan's Murray Hill
    neighborhood.


    The unconventional perfor-mance by Armenian-American artist Kardash
    Onnig symbolizes his long journey in promoting dialogue and
    understanding between Turks and Armenians. Onnig, whose parents were
    born and raised here in Turkey, told Sunday's Zaman that he has been
    struggling to make the case for the reopening of the border between
    Turkey and Armenia. On a recent trip that took him all over the
    country, he said, `I came back very proud of my heritage that had
    given so much to Turkish culture.'

    Ironically though, he became the target of hate from his own. His visa
    has been revoked by the Armenian Embassy in Washington because of the
    book `Savage Chic: A Fool's Chronicle of the Caucasus,' which he
    published after returning from a six-month artist-in-residency stay in
    Karabakh.

    Like Onnig, there is a sizable number of Armenians coming to Turkey,
    and their number is growing along with a positive perception of Turks
    and Turkey. Armenians, who feel the economic crisis taking its toll
    back home, are moving to Turkey in the hope of landing on a job. They
    obtain non-immigrant tourist visas on the border and simply overstay
    their visas after being hired as babysitters, cleaners, factory
    workers or seasonal farm workers, albeit illegally.

    Up to 100,000 workers from Armenia

    Nobody knows the exact number of Armenian expatriates who live in
    Turkey and send money home. But various figures estimate the numbers
    to be between 40,000 on conservative side, all the way up to
    100,000. With the possible opening of the border between Turkey and
    Armenia, their numbers are expected to increase.

    Armenian expats recently became a subject of controversy in Turkey
    after some politicians seized the opportunity to capitalize on the
    growing discontent about illegal workers numbering more than a
    million. Against the backdrop of possible normalization of relations
    with Armenia, some have raised the possibility of sending Armenian
    expats back to their home country in an attempt to derail the dialogue
    process.

    `I'm not opposed to Armenian workers flocking to Turkey to look for a
    job,' says Güven Sak, professor of economics at the Ankara-based
    Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges University of
    Economics and Technology (TOBB ETÃ`). `It indicates Turkey has
    become a center of attraction for neighboring countries, and this
    creates a lot of opportunities for us,' he told Sunday's Zaman. He
    stressed, however, that guest workers should be employed legally. `The
    government needs to overhaul the immigration system and review border
    security along the guidelines of European Union norms,' he added.

    Mehmet Seyfettin Erol, professor of international relations at Gazi
    University, agrees with Sak in that a possible backlash against
    Armenian workers might backfire on Turkey and harm the interests of
    the country. Speaking to Sunday's Zaman, Erol underlined the
    importance of Armenian workers living and earning their livelihood in
    Turkey and said, `This is soft power for Turkey.' He also urged more
    cooperation between civic organizations and youth and health
    institutions in the two countries. `Treating them as `others' does not
    serve any purpose and it will, in all likelihood, push Armenians away
    from Turkey,' he noted.

    Workers' remittances important for Armenia

    Keeping Armenian workers well fed and well paid here in Turkey will
    surely strengthen Turkey's role at a time when more Armenian migrant
    laborers are returning from abroad in big numbers. The Ministry of
    Economy in Yerevan estimates the country receives more than $2.5
    billion a year in remittances, which make up about a fifth of
    Armenia's gross domestic product (GDP). With less money available to
    send home because of the distressed job market abroad, the revenue of
    the government fell 25 percent this year. Returning expats are also
    adding to the huge army of the unemployed in a nation of 3 million.

    The local currency has lost a third of its value against the dollar,
    and the government has turned to International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
    the World Bank for a loan amounting to over $1 billion. It is also
    soliciting a helping hand from Russia, the biggest trading partner and
    investor in the country. Russian companies control much of Armenia's
    infrastructure, including railways, gas pipelines, a nuclear power
    plant and mobile telecoms.

    Although the border has remained closed since 1993, as a sign of
    solidarity with Azerbaijan after Armenia occupied Nagorno-Karabakh,
    Turkey lifted restrictions on the admission of Armenians into the
    country in January 2002. Armenian visitors can either use airlines
    that operate regularly between Yerevan-Ä°stanbul and
    Yerevan-Trabzon, or they can use bus services routed through Georgia
    ending in cities across the Black Sea coast in eastern Turkey.

    The current visa regime allows Armenian citizens to enter the country
    on 30-day non-resident visas. If any alien is found to be working
    illegally, they are reported to the Ministry of Labor and Social
    Security. The alien is later deported to their home country and fined
    TL 844 ($540). He or she is also barred from re-entry to Turkey for
    five years. The employer also gets hit with a TL 4,227 ($2700).

    Å?ükrü ElekdaÄ?, an opposition party deputy
    from the Republican People's Party (CHP), was very critical of the
    government at the time and suggested the deportation of 70,000
    Armenian workers in stages. Asked by Sunday's Zaman whether he still
    holds the same view today, ElekdaÄ? dodged the question and
    declined to comment on the issue, saying the question is based on
    ill-faith.

    PM: Turkey will not deport Armenians

    Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an, dismissed
    flatly, however, any suggestion that Armenian workers should be
    deported in order to pressure the Yerevan government. Putting the
    figure at around 40,000 in a speech he delivered in January,
    ErdoÄ?an said: `They [Armenian workers] fled the country, they
    could not sustain themselves in their homeland, and we opened our
    doors. We could deport them, but we are not doing so.' Stressing that
    Turkey had welcomed people many times in the past, the prime minister
    underlined that Turkey is continuing to present the same exemplary
    attitude.

    In fact, government agencies have rarely used their power to deport
    Armenians so far. In response to a parliamentary question brought by
    ultranationalist party, the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), deputy
    Hakan CoÅ?kun, who reiterated claims raised by ElekdaÄ?
    earlier, Interior Minister BeÅ?ir Atalay said eight Armenians
    were deported in 2007 and only one as of March 2008. In comparison,
    more than 50,000 Armenians passed through the Turkish border
    checkpoint in 2007, making the number of deportees seem almost
    insignificant.

    Even though there is an undeclared official policy to keep Armenian
    workers relatively comfortable here in Turkey, there is not much the
    government can do if and when it decides to crack down on illegal
    immigration. `The fines and penalties are high, but the numbers of
    official inspectors who are tasked with finding illegal employees in
    workplaces are very few,' says Kadir DikbaÅ?, a columnist and
    expert on economic policy in Ä°stanbul. He said he understands
    the reasoning behind the government policy but says the situation
    creates unfair competition in employment policies. `There is also the
    risk of not protecting these workers' rights as they simply do not
    exist in official records,' he added.

    10 May 2009, Sunday
    ABDULLAH BOZKURT ANKARA

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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