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Georgia NA gives tentative backing to repat of persecuted minority

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  • Georgia NA gives tentative backing to repat of persecuted minority

    Georgia parliament gives tentative backing to repatriation of
    long-persecuted minority
    MISHA DZHINDZHIKHASHVILI, AP Worldstream
    Published: Jun 22, 2007


    Georgian lawmakers gave preliminary backing Friday to legislation
    authorizing the repatriation of a long-persecuted largely Muslim
    minority who were deported en masse to Central Asia in the 1940s.

    Parliament voted 134-14 to pass the bill, introduced by President
    Mikhail Saakashvili's ruling party, which would mainly benefit the
    Meskhetian Turks, although it also gives legal authorization for the
    repatriation of others "forcibly deported by authorities of the USSR
    from Georgia."

    Stalin deported the Meskhetian Turks from regions along Georgia's
    border with Turkey to Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan during
    World War II. In 1989, racial violence broke out in Uzbekistan, with
    the Meskhetian Turks and other deported ethnic groups targeted as
    outsiders. Many members of the minority fled.

    Georgian authorities delayed allowing the Meskhetian Turks to return,
    fearing, among other things, violence with ethnic Armenians who moved
    into the lands vacated when the largely Muslim group was deported.

    Some 20,000 Meskhetian Turks have lived for years in legal limbo in
    southern Russia, unable to get official residence permits or to rent
    land _ the result of strict anti-immigrant regulations. Thousands were
    given refugee status in the United States in 2004 and resettled there.

    As a condition of joining the Council of Europe in 1999, Georgia agreed
    to guarantee the return by 2011 of the Meskhetian Turks, an estimated
    300,00 of which are scattered in several former Soviet republics. About
    40,000 are believed to be actively seeking to return to their ancestral
    homelands.

    The Georgian bill, which must go through two more readings, provides no
    financial assistance for resettlement and no guarantee that those
    applying for repatriation will be allowed to return. Those returning
    must also give up any other citizenship they have, take tests on
    Georgian language, history and laws.

    Saakashvili supports the measure. However, among Georgians, who are
    mainly Christian, there is still deep suspicion of the Meskhetian Turks.

    Opposition lawmakers voting against the measure complained that more
    should be done to help ethnic Georgian refugees driven out of their
    homes in the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia during
    wars in the 1990s.
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