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Turkey Threatens To Expel 100,000 Armenians Over US Row

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  • Turkey Threatens To Expel 100,000 Armenians Over US Row

    TURKEY THREATENS TO EXPEL 100,000 ARMENIANS OVER US ROW
    by Damien McElroy, Foreign Affairs Correspondent

    Daily Telegraph
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnew s/europe/turkey/7465701/Turkey-threatens-to-expel- 100000-Armenians-over-genocide-row.html
    5:52PM GMT 17 Mar 2010
    UK

    Turkey has threatened to expel 100,000 Armenians from the country in
    response to the US branding the First World War killings of Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks as "genocide".

    Ottoman soldiers posing in front of Armenians they hung on a public
    place, image taken in Alep in 1915 Photo: GETTY Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    the Turkish prime minister, said the position of the immigrants,
    many of whom have lived there as refugees for a generation, was being
    reviewed in the wake of the row.

    Armenia claims more than 500,000 of its countrymen died in bitter
    in-fighting as the Ottoman Empire disintegrated at the height of the
    First World War.

    Turkey concedes that tens of thousands died in ethnic fighting but
    vehemently disputes accusations that massacres were systematically
    planned.

    Tensions with Armenia have recently escalated as a well-organised
    worldwide campaign has persuaded the American Congress and Swedish
    parliament to adopt resolutions condemning the incidents as "genocide".

    An Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day Bill has also been put before
    the House of Commons and Mr Erdogan has warned Gordon Brown that
    relations would suffer if parliament passes it.

    Turkish law already makes discussion of genocide an offence punishable
    by imprisonment.

    "There are currently 170,000 Armenians living in our country. Only
    70,000 of them are Turkish citizens, but we are tolerating the
    remaining 100,000," said Mr Erdogan.

    "If necessary, I may have to tell these 100,000 to go back to their
    country because they are not my citizens. I don't have to keep them
    in my country."

    The suggestion has proved controversial in Turkey with Ahmed Davutoglu,
    Turkey's foreign minister, rejecting any calls to drive out Armenians.

    Mr Davutoglu said the move would put Turkey in the "hot seat" as it
    attempted to fend off charges of ingrained racial prejudice.

    He said: "If we do it, will provoke other states that opposes
    our policy to use the move as a bargaining chip. All newspapers
    will publish photos of deported Armenians and it will be called
    a nationalism."

    Turkey has been dismayed by the campaign as it had been attempting
    to establish normal diplomatic relations with the ex-Soviet state.

    Mr Erdogan said its neighbour should distance itself from the overseas
    community leading the lobbying.

    He said: "Armenia has an important decision to make. It should free
    itself from its attachment to the diaspora. Any country which cares
    for Armenia, namely the US, France and Russia, should primarily help
    Armenia to free itself from the influence of the diaspora."

    But yesterday there was uproar in Armenai over the suggestion of
    deportations. Hrayr Karapetyan, an Armenian MP, condemned Mr Erdogan's
    remarks as blackmail.

    "The statement once again proves that there is an Armenian genocide
    threat in present Turkey, thus world community should pressurise
    Ankara to recognise [the] genocide," he said.

    Turkey allows visa free access from much of the Caucuses and Central
    Asia. As a result its cities are populated by a high number of
    illegal immigrants.

    The small community of Armenians who hold Turkish citizenship have
    often borne the strain of the country's political tensions.
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