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ISTANBUL: New Residence Law 'trauma' For Students From Armenia

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  • ISTANBUL: New Residence Law 'trauma' For Students From Armenia

    NEW RESIDENCE LAW 'TRAUMA' FOR STUDENTS FROM ARMENIA

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Jan 31 2012

    Some families send their children to the basement of the Armenian
    Protestant Church in GedikpaÅ~_a where they receive their school
    education informally. DAILY NEWS photo

    Children of Armenian workers that are enrolled in Turkish minority
    schools are waiting apprehensively for a new foreigners' residence
    law as the new regulations could result in many foreigners being
    expelled from the country.

    "These kids have grown up in Turkey. This is where they received their
    education. It will turn their lives upside down if they are sent
    back," Karekin Barsamyan, the director of the Mıhitaryan Private
    Armenian High School in Istanbul's NiÅ~_antaÅ~_ı neighborhood,
    told the Hurriyet Daily News.

    The law, which will only permit foreigners to reside in Turkey 90
    days out of 180 unless they pay to obtain an insurance premium,
    goes into effect tomorrow.

    Sixty students from Armenia are enrolled in Armenian minority schools
    across Istanbul, Barsamyan said, adding that the concept of being a
    "guest student" had already led to traumatic problems for the children.

    "A person who resides in Turkey for three months has to wait for
    another three months before going back into Turkey again according
    to the new residence law. It's possible that these kids' education
    is going to be disrupted," he said.

    The children were admitted into Armenian minority schools for the
    2011-2012 education year by means of a special permit granted by
    the Education Ministry. They receive education under the status of a
    "guest student," which means they receive neither report cards nor
    diplomas. Students enrolled in minority schools must hold Turkish
    citizenship based on the Lausanne Treaty of 1923, while pupils are
    further affected by the restrictive Armenian Schools Law that was
    passed in the 1940s.

    "Even though this law seems to be universal, the real target is the
    people from Armenia. Prime Minister [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan had openly
    hurled threats in 2010. The government contradicts itself. On one hand,
    it grants the status of a 'guest student' to the children and says
    it will enact new legal arrangements while trying to deport families
    on the other," Pastor Krikor Agabaloglu of the Armenian Protestant
    Church in Istanbul's GedikpaÅ~_a neighborhood told the Daily News.

    Angered at the time by foreign parliaments passing motions related
    to the events of 1915, Erdogan threatened in 2010 to retaliate by
    deporting up to "100,000" Armenian citizens living illegally in Turkey.

    Some families send their children to the basement floor of the
    Armenian Protestant Church in GedikpaÅ~_a where they receive education
    informally so as to avoid exposing their identities.

    "Yes, those who pay 400 Turkish Liras in insurance premiums will be
    able to continue residing [in Turkey] in accordance with the new law,
    but almost 90 percent of those coming here are women, and the wages
    they earn are too low. They cannot meet this price. As a church, we
    strive to help them materially and spiritually to get them to hold
    onto life. Our [means] are inadequate, however," Agabaloglu said,
    adding that he condemned the new law.

    All these women are university graduates who found employment in
    patient care, baby-sitting and house labor to meet their families'
    needs, he said. "I call on people's conscience. Do not let this law
    go through."

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