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Turkey Threatens To Kick Out Armenian Migrants

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  • Turkey Threatens To Kick Out Armenian Migrants

    TURKEY THREATENS TO KICK OUT ARMENIAN MIGRANTS

    EUobserver.com
    http://euobserver.com/24/ 29710
    March 18 2010

    Turkish premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that some 100,000
    Armenians working illegally in his country could be expelled "if
    necessary," as historic tensions over mass killings in World War I
    bubble up on the EU's fringe.

    Ottoman Turks killed hundreds of thousands of Armenians in 1915.

    Ankara has staunchly refused to accept that the events amount to
    actions "genocide." But recent parliamentary resolutions in the US
    and Sweden have urged the Turkish government to accept the terminology.

    Turkey's reconciliation with Armenia is on hold (Photo: zz77)

    Ankara retaliated by recalling its ambassador from Washington and by
    strongly criticising Stockholm.

    But in an interview with the BBC on Wednesday, Mr Erdogan went a
    step further, saying that the resolutions "harm the Armenian people
    as well ...and things become deadlocked."

    He threatened to deport 100,000 Armenian migrants who have no residence
    or working permits in Turkey.

    Mr Erdogan said that out of the 170,000 Armenians living in the
    country just "70,000 are Turkish citizens.".

    "We are turning a blind eye to the remaining 100,000 ...Tomorrow,
    I may tell these 100,000 to go back to their country, if it becomes
    necessary," he said.

    His Armenian counterpart, Tigran Sarkisian, reacted by saying that such
    comments "do not help to improve relations between our two states."

    Ankara was last year praised by the EU for its "historic" decision
    to unfreeze diplomatic relations with Yerevan, under an agreement
    signed in October 2009.

    Normalising relations with its neighbours is an important step in
    Turkey's EU accession bid. The union is also keen for Turkish diplomacy
    to help pacify the South Caucasus region, a strategic energy corridor.

    The Turkish-Armenian agreement is still pending ratification in both
    parliaments and things seem to have been put on hold for now, however.

    During his first visit to Turkey on Monday, enlargement commissioner
    Stefan Fuele voiced support for the reconciliation efforts and warned
    against politicising historic events.

    "As someone who is coming from former Czechoslovakia, from the
    Czech Republic, I know that politicising your history is making
    reconciliation difficult," he was quoted as saying by the AFP.

    Turkey applied for EU membership as early as 1987, but has begun
    accession talks only in 2005. So far it opened negotiations in
    12 out of the 35 policy chapters it has to conclude with Brussels
    before joining.

    Unlike other candidate countries, Turkey's negotiations are "open
    ended," meaning that its membership can still be vetoed by any one
    EU country at the end of the process.
    From: Baghdasarian
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