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  • ANKARA: PM's Remarks Worry Armenian Migrants In Turkey

    PM'S REMARKS WORRY ARMENIAN MIGRANTS IN TURKEY

    Hurriyet
    March 19 2010
    Turkey

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. DHA photo

    The Turkish prime minister's recent suggestion that undocumented
    citizens of Armenia may have to be deported has raised fears among
    Armenian workers living in Turkey.

    Many migrants send the money they earn in Turkey to their families
    in Armenia, supporting that country's economy.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's comments to journalists in London
    on Tuesday came after a U.S. Congressional committee and the Swedish
    parliament accepted claims of "genocide" regarding the incidents of
    1915. The prime minister claimed that there are 100,000 undocumented
    Armenians working in Turkey and that Ankara has so far tolerated them.

    "So what will I do tomorrow? If necessary, I will tell them 'come on,
    back to your country'... I'm not obliged to keep them in my country.

    Those actions [on genocide resolutions] unfortunately have a negative
    impact on our sincere attitudes," Agence France-Presse quoted him
    as saying.

    According to a study by the Eurasia Partnership Foundation, there
    are anywhere between 6,000 and 70,000 people from Armenia residing
    in Turkey. A journalist from the weekly Agos estimated the number of
    Armenians working in Turkey at between 12,000 and 14,000, based on
    Ministry of Labor statistics.

    Speaking to daily Radikal, Karina, an Armenian citizen working in
    Istanbul's Kumkapı district, said she is worried about the statement.

    Karina, who declined to give her surname, has been living with a
    tourist visa in Turkey for the past five years. "Deportation will be
    bad for me economically and socially," she said.

    Making a living

    Others speaking to daily Radikal also said they had to work in Turkey
    to make a living.

    Armen, who also refrained from giving his surname, said he has a
    life in Turkey and does not want to leave that behind. "Even if
    the police come to me with a knife in their hands, I will not leave
    here," he said. "I am married. My children are with me and we are
    all right here."

    According to recent research, there are around 800 children who were
    born in Turkey to Armenian parents who live undocumented in the
    country. These children are in a legal limbo, citizens of neither
    nation.

    "If I am deported, I will find a way to return to Turkey," said Giyma
    Harutunyan, who has been living in Turkey for the past five years.

    Yura Sarkisyan, 70, who is involved in the "shuttle trade," told
    Radikal: "It is the politicians who make this thing complicated. There
    is no good in bringing up events that happened a long time ago. We
    do not want to leave. We are thankful to all the Turkish people."

    Some undocumented Armenians, however, said they would leave if they
    were no longer wanted in Turkey. A.N., 37, identified only by her
    initials, said she loved Turkey and has lived here for four years now,
    daily Hurriyet reported Thursday. "But if they want, we will leave. We
    are here because the chance to find a job in Armenia is small. This
    is our country's fault," said A.N., who works as a salesperson in
    Istanbul's Aksaray district.

    M.H., 43, also identified only by her initials, has worked as
    babysitter for four years in Turkey. She said plans to go back to
    Armenia within one or two years. "People should not suffer due to
    politics. We have a life here," she said.

    The other side of the coin

    T.Z., 28, identified only by her initials, told Hurriyet she was a
    student of Russian literature before she came to Turkey. "I work in
    a textile firm here," she said. "My husband lives in Armenia. I want
    him to come here, too."

    T.Z. said the prime minister's statements irked her. "Hundreds of
    thousands of Turks are working in Europe illegally," she said. "Turkey
    should not forget that."

    Haygazun Alvrstyan, an academic from Yerevan State University, told
    the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review on Thursday that Erdogan's
    statements are a disturbing reminder of history. "[They again want]
    Armenians to be deported. It is a shame that this statement is made
    by a prime minister," he said.

    The academic added that there are only about 10,000 Armenian citizens
    in Turkey, saying Erdogan is exaggerating the figure in order to
    "coerce the European Union and the U.S. not to approve resolutions
    on genocide claims."

    Siranuys Dvyoan, a professor in Armenia, said undocumented workers
    are not just Armenia's problem, noting that Turks work in various
    countries in a similar fashion. "Turkey is trying to display Armenia
    as a poor country in the world," she said.

    Tevan Poghosyan, from the Yerevan-based International Center of Human
    Development, said Erdogan is trying to distract attention from the
    genocide issue.

    Vercihan Ziflioglu contributed to this report from Istanbul
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