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Turkey's First Assyrian MP Discusses Candidacy, Minority Rights

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  • Turkey's First Assyrian MP Discusses Candidacy, Minority Rights

    TURKEY'S FIRST ASSYRIAN MP DISCUSSES CANDIDACY, MINORITY RIGHTS

    SES Turkiye
    2011-11-01

    Lawmaker Erol Dora says the neglected state of his people has made
    them the minority of minorities in Anatolia.

    Erol Dora, Turkey's first Assyrian MP, was selected as an independent
    candidate of the Labour, Democracy and Freedom bloc -- a coalition
    of Turkish socialists and the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party
    (BDP). The bloc entered the election as independent candidates only
    to unite under BDP in parliament.

    Turkish MP Erol Dora. [Ozgur Ogret]

    Although he was interested in politics as an observer, Dora never
    considered entering the political arena since there are too few
    Assyrians to elect a deputy in Turkey.

    There are about 20,000 Assyrians -- also known as Suryani and Chaldeans
    -- remaining in Anatolia. Many emigrated after World War I to Syria,
    Iraq, Russia, Europe and North America.

    "BDP contacted me. They called me and said they wanted to have an
    Assyrian candidate in this electoral process," Dora, a lawyer living
    in Istanbul at the time, explained.

    He said his election is meaningful in two ways. First, BDP was being
    criticised as a party of only Kurds that did not reach out to Turkey
    as a whole. Second, Kurds and Assyrians have been living in Anatolia
    for centuries but have experienced "dissociation".

    His election was a positive step in overcoming differences he says,
    noting that he received votes from Arabs, Assyrians and Kurds.

    Dora says the dissociation occurred not only with the Kurds, but also
    Turks. "Distrust has appeared between the peoples of Anatolia during
    certain historical processes," he said, adding that the economic,
    political and other reasons for Assyrian emigration from Turkey should
    be investigated.

    As a non-Muslim group, Assyrians are defined as a minority according
    to the Treaty of Lausanne, but Dora says the definition of minorities
    as only non-Muslims is quite narrow. The first draft of the Treaty
    of Lausanne included Kurds, Laz, Circassians and other peoples of
    Anatolia he says, but the Turks objected to minority status for other
    Muslim groups.

    "Minority is recognised differently in Turkey; it is not a positive
    word," he argues, citing the example of the Turkish Supreme Court of
    Appeals definition of non-Muslims as "foreigners" in the 1970s.

    According to Dora, the bureaucracy and government traditionally think
    of Armenians, Greeks and Jews when the word minority is mentioned.

    "The Assyrians did not really have awareness of their rights; they
    didn't have an ideal nor thought on claiming them."

    However, in the 1990s, Lausanne began to be a topic of discussion in
    Turkey -- driven largely by the EU process. That changed many things
    for minorities, since they all shared the "oppressed" mentality and
    "they started to feel more relaxed and like a member of this country,"
    Dora says. "An evolution from the mandatory citizenship to volunteer
    citizenship has started."

    "The structure of the state is unitary: one language, one state,
    one nation and that was an assimilative policy. Therefore, it was
    a ball and chain for the people's freedoms. It is required that we
    should say this openly and face the history and truths in order to
    acquire change and reform," Dora said. "None of us can be at ease
    before the Kurdish problem is solved."

    http://turkey.setimes.com/en_GB/articles/ses/articles/features/departments/national/2011/11/01/feature-01


    From: Baghdasarian
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