Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Armenian Deportation Remarks Draw Ire Locally And Abroad

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Armenian Deportation Remarks Draw Ire Locally And Abroad

    ARMENIAN DEPORTATION REMARKS DRAW IRE LOCALLY AND ABROAD

    Today's Zaman
    March 19 2010
    Turkey

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's remarks about the possible
    deportation of undocumented Armenian workers from Turkey after US and
    Swedish lawmakers passed resolutions branding the World War I-era
    killings of Anatolian Armenians as genocide have sparked reactions
    both in Yerevan and in Ankara.

    "Look, there are 170,000 Armenians in my country -- 70,000 of them are
    my citizens, but we are [tolerating] 100,000 of them [illegally] in our
    country. So, what will we do tomorrow? If it is necessary, I will tell
    them, 'Come on, back to your country.' I will do it. Why? They are not
    my citizens. I am not obliged to keep them in my country. I mean these
    are [defenders of the Armenian claims of genocide]. Their attitude is
    negatively affecting our sincere attitude, and they are not aware of
    it," Erdogan told the BBC Turkish service in an interview on Tuesday.

    Erdogan's comments met with a stern reaction from Armenia. "This kind
    of political statement does not help improve relations between the two
    states," said Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sarksyan. "I agree with
    the assessment that when the Turkish prime minister allows himself
    to make such statements, the events of 1915 immediately return to
    our memory," he added.

    Thousands of illegal Armenian immigrants, mostly women from the
    impoverished countryside, work as cleaning ladies and in other
    low-skilled jobs in Ä°stanbul, where many settled after an earthquake
    in their homeland in 1988. The exact number of Armenian immigrants in
    Turkey is unknown. But Turkish-Armenian groups say Turkish politicians
    inflate the numbers of illegal workers and threaten expulsions whenever
    tensions escalate between Ankara and Yerevan.

    In Ankara, Deniz Baykal, the leader of the main opposition Republican
    People's Party (CHP), called Erdogan's remarks "grave" and "against
    human rights."

    "Wanting to use people who came to Turkey for work as a trump card
    in the resolution of a dispute is definitely unacceptable and
    is against human rights. Various people may have some ideas, an
    opposition party deputy may also say something [similar], but these
    are not statements that have results -- perhaps you can call them
    inappropriate statements. But when a prime minister, a person who has
    the authority to deport them, says such things, then it is very grave,"
    Baykal told his party's parliamentary group meeting on Wednesday.

    Back in October 2006, upon the adoption of a French bill criminalizing
    the denial of the alleged genocide of Armenians, CHP deputy Å~^ukru
    Elekdag, a former Turkish ambassador to the US, had called for
    sanctions on Armenia, which he said was working in cooperation with the
    Armenian diaspora for international recognition of the alleged genocide
    and said that some Armenian illegal workers should be deported.

    In Ä°stanbul, the Young Civilians, a civil society group known for
    its creative demonstrations in support of democracy, held a protest on
    Ä°stiklal Street, in a show of protest against the prime minister. The
    group digitally edited a photograph of Talat PaÅ~_a to include photos
    of Erdogan and Canan Arıtman of the CHP, who also suggested deporting
    Armenian workers in Turkey.

    "Let's send them via the Erzurum-Kars route, barefoot," text on the
    photo read, in apparent reference to the 1915 forced emigration of
    Anatolian Armenians. Armenians were forcefully expelled to the Syrian
    desert in 1915 upon orders from Talat PaÅ~_a.
Working...
X