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Ankara: Georgia's Attempt At Repatriation Disappoints Meskhetians

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  • Ankara: Georgia's Attempt At Repatriation Disappoints Meskhetians

    GEORGIA'S ATTEMPT AT REPATRIATION DISAPPOINTS MESKHETIANS

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    July 3 2007

    A new parliamentary bill by Tbilisi is very unlikely to satisfy
    Meskhetian Turks, a group of Muslims deported in 1944, as it denies
    their national identity among other unpopular measures

    FULYA OZERKAN ANKARA - Turkish Daily News

    New legislation introduced by the Georgian government authorizing the
    repatriation of a long-prosecuted Muslim minority but under strict
    rules caused discord among Meskethians in Turkey.

    Rustem Murseloðlu, a Meskhetian Turk whose father was among those
    deported en masse to Central Asia in the 1940s, told the Turkish
    Daily News that the new bill denies the identity of Meskhetian Turks;
    describing them as Georgian Muslims even though Stalin's original
    deportation decree describes them as Turks.

    Under the legislation, those returning must integrate with Georgian
    society and renounce any other citizenship they have.

    "I hold citizenship in both Turkey and Azerbaijan. Why shall I give up
    my Turkish nationality? It is as if Georgian authorities are bestowing
    us with U.S. citizenship," said Murseloðlu, head of an association
    for education, culture and social solidarity with Meskhetian Turks.

    Critical of Tbilisi's policies toward resettlement of Meskhetian
    Turks, he said: "These policies are aimed at assimilating us. There
    are around 50,000 Meskhetian Turks in Turkey and a return is out of
    the question under these circumstances," he stressed.

    During World War II, the USSR deported Meskhetian Turks from regions
    along Georgia's border with Turkey to Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and
    Kyrgyzstan for supposed treason.

    Until recently, Georgian authorities have delayed allowing Meskhetian
    Turks to return for various reasons. In order to join the Council
    of Europe in 1999, Georgia agreed to guarantee the return of the
    Meskhetian Turks by 2011, an estimated 300,000 of which are scattered
    in former Soviet republics.

    Last month, Georgian lawmakers gave preliminary backing to the bill
    introduced by President Mikhail Saakashvili's ruling party intended
    to benefit Meskhetian Turks, also giving legal authorization for the
    repatriation of others "forcibly deported by authorities of the Soviet
    Union from Georgia."

    The bill, which was drafted in the course of eight years and which
    must go through two more readings before adoption, is unlikely to
    satisfy the expectations of Meskhetian Turks.

    Yunus Zeyrek, a scholar at Ankara's Gazi University who brought to
    light the issue of Meskhetian Turks through his writings, prepared a
    file in five languages (German, French, English, Russian, and Turkish)
    defending Meskhetian Turks on the issue of repatriation and presented
    it to officials of the Strasbourg-based Council of Europe.

    "This bill is a complete disaster and will never be accepted by
    Meskhetian Turks," said Zeyrek, also head of the International
    Federation of the Meskhetian Turk Associations. "The bill imposes a
    quota on returning families, forces them to go through re-education
    camps focusing on Georgian culture and language, and resettles them
    outside their ancestral lands."

    Armenian factor:

    The presence of Armenians that moved into the lands vacated by
    Meskhetians is one of the reasons for the Georgian government's refusal
    to resettle returning Meskhetians in their old lands fearing violence
    with ethnic Armenians.

    "This is false propaganda. The Armenians there are not economically
    wealthy and believe the returning Meskhetians will contribute to the
    revival of economic life," Zeyrek said. "I believe the Armenian factor
    is being exaggerated."

    Uncertainty:

    Meskhetian Turks in Kyrgyzstan are complaining of uncertainty over
    the contentious bill that received the tentative backing of the
    Georgian parliament.

    Murafeddin Sakimov, head of the Meskhetian Turks' Association in
    Kyrgyzstan, told the Anatolia news agency that the bill did not
    provide any details on the returning process of Meskhetians to their
    ancestral lands.

    "As Meskhetians who were deported in 1944, we want to return to the
    Meskhetian region," he said, dismissing the conditions laid down by
    the Georgian government.

    --Boundary_(ID_S6fGza43SVXbW7wcp+Yxjg )--
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