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  • Turkey Trouble: Armenian Tourists Spooked By One-Sided Accounts Of V

    TURKEY TROUBLE: ARMENIAN TOURISTS SPOOKED BY ONE-SIDED ACCOUNTS OF VIOLENCE IN NEIGHBORING STATE
    Siranuysh Gevorgyan

    ArmeniaNow
    Social | 30.07.10 | 12:52

    Reported violence in Turkey involving holidaymakers from Armenia
    and at least one case of an Armenian citizen gone missing in the
    neighboring country have raised concerns in Yerevan about possible
    ethnic motives behind these developments. While it appears that the
    reports were sensationalized and information not verified, the result,
    nonetheless, has been that some Armenian tourists are now nervous
    about going for a Turkish holiday.

    A local tour operator offering trips to Turkish spas and resorts says
    following these one-sided accounts they've seen an increased number of
    telephone inquiries from concerned citizens who were hesitating whether
    to choose to spend their summer vacations in Turkey (whose resorts are
    believed to offer a better value for money than local holiday spots).

    (Armenia and Turkey share a history of mutual animosity and despite
    efforts at the level of political leaderships in recent years to
    mend fences still do not have diplomatic relations and their common
    border remains closed. Still, a large number of Armenians, including
    citizens of Armenia, live or stay in Turkey for work and go there
    for rest every year).

    Reports about a pregnant Armenian woman who went missing in Turkey
    and an Armenian family that suffered violence in a hotel have been
    spreading through media and online social networks in recent days.

    Many, among them also some officials, have been giving some political
    coloring to these events, urging people to refrain from traveling to
    Turkey for vacation.

    Quoting Turkish daily newspaper Sabah, Armenian media reported that
    29-year-old Anna Davtyan (she is married and lives in Dubai, the
    United Arab Emirates, and is in her sixth month of pregnancy) went
    missing in mysterious circumstances as she has not been seen since
    she parted with her friend at a hotel in Ankara on July 17. Davtyan's
    mother Karina Davtyan, who went to Turkey to find her daughter,
    fears she might have been kidnapped.

    No further information is available about this case. Armenian Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Tigran Balayan told ArmeniaNow that the Ministry was
    working in the direction of finding the missing citizen, but did not
    elaborate on concrete steps being made. The spokesman said the Ministry
    was informed about the case only twelve days after it supposedly
    happened, which, according to him, is "strange". But the official
    promised that the Ministry will keep the public updated on this case
    if information of any value pertaining to the case becomes available.

    Another Armenian family on a holiday in Turkey returned mostly
    unscathed, but have told of the ordeal they had to go through while
    staying in a Turkish hotel. According to their accounts, they suffered
    because together with a group of young men from Russia (two of them
    ethnic Armenians) they stood up to defend two girls from Moscow,
    one of whom was also an ethnic Armenian, and that resulted in a brawl
    and a fistfight with hotel workers.

    Liana Mamyan says her son and husband did nothing wrong but were
    mistreated by Turkish hotel workers. She said that the Russian girls
    were sitting in the hotel's foyer and working on their notebook when a
    waiter came and rudely dragged the table cloth. The girls reproached
    the waiter who started to argue with them and then four young men
    from Russia joined in the quarrel and that's how the fight between
    the hotel workers and the four men began. According to Mamyan, hotel
    workers also beat her elder son and her husband.

    "We have decided one thing for sure in our family. We will never,
    ever go to Turkey again," Mamyan concluded in her published account.

    What objectively appears an isolated incident not connected to
    locale or nationality, has gained an ethnic coloring as the family's
    account has been disseminated and discussed in internet forums and
    on television.

    The issue of whether Armenians should go to Turkey as holidaymakers
    has generated heated debates in Armenia for years. Those who advise
    against spending vacations in Turkey usually say that by going there
    Armenians help Azerbaijan, Turkey's ethnic cousin and Armenia's
    archrival in the region, because Turkey ostensibly sends the money
    left by Armenians in Turkish resorts to Baku.

    In a recent TV interview Gagik Yeganyan, head of the Migration Agency
    at the Ministry of Local Government of Armenia, recalled the statement
    containing threats to deport Armenians staying in Turkey illegally
    that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made earlier this
    year. He alleged that some ordinary Turks may have taken those words
    as a call to action.

    But Tez Tour Ltd director Narine Davtyan told ArmeniaNow that media
    in Armenia have been spreading the news of recent violence involving
    Armenians in Turkey without checking facts with them. (Tez Tour,
    a major Russian tour operator that has an affiliate in Armenia, had
    organized the trip for the family in question and says it possesses
    first-hand information from its representative in Antalya.)

    "In fact, the incident happened at about 1-2 a.m. and it was waiters
    asking the girls repeatedly to take their notebook off the table so
    they could prepare it for the morning breakfast, and those repeated
    request remained unanswered. An angry waiter then took the notebook
    and put it on another table," says Davtyan, adding that at that moment
    a group of four young Russians approached and the quarrel began.

    According to Davtyan, that incident did not involve any political or
    ethnic motives and the cause was the disrespectful attitude towards
    the waitress, which "can often be met in Yerevan as well."

    "In general, hotels in Antalya are apolitical because they are
    interested in the business side of things," says Davtyan, adding that
    this is the first such incident that happened to their tourists in
    Turkey. She also says that they first learned about it from press
    publications and that none of the people who claim to have suffered
    violence from Turkish hotel workers have lodged a complaint with
    the company.




    From: A. Papazian
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