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Turkey threatens to expel 100K Armenians; 'They are not my citizens'

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  • Turkey threatens to expel 100K Armenians; 'They are not my citizens'

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    March 18, 2010 Thursday
    Final Edition


    Turkey threatens to expel 100,000 Armenians; 'They are not my
    citizens'; PM Warning comes as Sweden and U.S. brand Ottoman-era
    killings as genocide

    IBON VILLELABEITIA, Reuters
    ANKARA


    Turkey's prime minister has threatened to expel thousands of illegal
    Armenian immigrants after U.S. and Swedish lawmakers passed votes
    branding First World War-era killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as
    genocide.

    Muslim Turkey, a NATO member and candidate to join the European Union,
    recalled its ambassadors to Washington and Stockholm this month after
    the non-binding votes and warned that they could hurt a fragile effort
    to reconcile with Christian Armenia after a century of hostility.

    Asked about the votes in an interview with the BBC Turkish service
    that was broadcast late Tuesday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan said: "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.

    "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."

    Commentators have said the U.S. vote could affect Washington's use of
    the Incirlik Air base in southeast Turkey, which provides vital
    logistical support for U.S. troops going to and from Iraq.

    Erdogan's comments met with a stern reaction from Armenia.

    "This kind of political statement does not help improve relations
    between the two states," Prime Minister Tigran Sarksyan said.

    "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-skill jobs in Istanbul, 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.

    Erdogan said Armenian immigrants had been allowed to work in Turkey as
    a "display of our peaceful approach, but we have to get something in
    return."
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