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  • More than 100 protest Turkish PM's Armenian deportation threat

    Agence France Presse
    March 19, 2010 Friday 5:52 PM GMT

    More than 100 protest Turkish PM's Armenian deportation threat

    ISTANBUL, March 19 2010


    More than 100 protestors took to the streets of Istanbul Friday,
    accusing Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of racism over
    his threat to deport illegal Armenian workers.

    Between 100-150 demonstrators marched along the Istiklal Avenue, the
    main commercial street on the European side of the city, carrying
    banners with the inscription "You are not Alone" in Turkish, English,
    Armenian and Kurdish, an AFP photographer said.

    "Tayyip should be deported! A world without nations, borders and
    classes," chanted the demonstrators gathered at the call of a
    non-governmental organization campaigning for immigrants' rights.

    A statement, distributed to the press, accused Erdogan of treating
    Armenian immigrants as a pawn in Ankara's protests against some
    foreign parliament's recognition of Armenian claims of genocide by
    Ottoman Turks.

    "We strongly condemn Erdogan... and those who share his racist and
    discriminatory mentality," the statement added.

    The demonstration ended peacefully.

    In comments criticized at home and abroad, Erdogan said his government
    could expel thousands of illegal Armenian workers if foreign
    parliaments continue to pass votes branding the World War I-era
    massacres of Armenians as genocide.

    Resolutions recently voted to that effect in the United States and
    Sweden "adversely affect our sincere attitude" towards illegal
    Armenians, Erdogan told the BBC Turkish service on Tuesday.

    "There are 170,000 Armenians in my country. Of these, 70,000 are
    citizens, but we are tolerating the remaining 100,000... If necessary,
    I may have to tell them to go back to their country... I am not
    obliged to keep them here," he charged.

    The exact number of illegal Armenians in Turkey are unknown, but
    researchers say there are between 10,000 to 20,000 of them, adding
    that Turkish authorities tend to inflate the figures to put pressure
    on Armenia.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in a systematic
    extermination campaign during 1915-1918 as the Ottoman Empire fell
    apart.

    Turkey categorically reject the genocide label and argues that the
    toll is grossly inflated.

    str-han/lt

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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