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  • ISTANBUL: Resistance to urban renewal in historic Black Sea town

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    April 24 2014

    Resistance to urban renewal in historic Black Sea town

    Zeynep BÄ°LGEHANHÃ`RRÄ°YET / HEMÅ?Ä°N


    The HemÅ?in people, or HemÅ?inites, were originally Armenians who fled
    to the Pontus region along the eastern Black Sea as Arab troops
    occupied their homeland in 790. Levent KULU

    Although Turkey's Council of State granted a stay of execution on a
    controversial urban renewal project, the Prime Ministry's Housing
    Development Administration (TOKÄ°) has geared up to partly demolish a
    sleepy Black Sea town which was home to Armenians in the past,
    triggering local resistance.

    HemÅ?in lies next to its touristic neighbor ÇamlıhemÅ?in in the eastern
    Black Sea province of Rize. Tea growing is the primary source of
    income for the 2,300 people living in the town.

    Former mayor BaÅ?ar Cumbur was the first official to come up with the
    urban renewal idea in the area in 2006. `Our goal was to protect the
    historical structures, while renovating the bad ones. We wanted to
    create a HemÅ?in town where people could stay permanently,' Cumbur
    said.

    He therefore signed a protocol with TOKÄ° in 2008, but locals opposed
    the municipality's initial plans. As a result, the mayor changed and
    so did the plans. Now, TOKÄ° plans to turn HemÅ?in into a touristic town
    with 157 residences and 29 shops. Each apartment will cost
    approximately 150,000 Turkish Liras (50,780 euros).



    Three citizens sued TOKÄ° and the HemÅ?in Municipality at the Rize
    Regional Administrative Court in 2010, claiming that their rights were
    violated. The court then ordered a stay of execution and canceled the
    project. However, the Council of Ministers upped the ante in 2011 by
    permitting all HemÅ?in to be declared as an urban renewal area, where
    every building within 7 hectares would be demolished.

    Locals sued the project at the Council of State this time, referring
    to the earlier ruling of the regional court. While the Council of
    State ordered its experts to prepare a report on the project, the
    government made another preemptive move and declared an `urgent
    expropriation' of the project area in HemÅ?in, using a law that lets
    the state expropriate private property in times of war.

    Ali Bayraktar, a shop owner in HemÅ?in who is closely following the
    court cases about the town, argues that it is illegal for the
    government to use a law about national defense for urban renewals. The
    Council of State issued another stay of execution when locals
    challenged the government again.

    Rejecting the objections of the Prime Ministry, the Interior Ministry
    and the HemÅ?in Municipality, the Council of State also sent three
    professors to the town from Dokuz Eylül University in 2013. Their
    60-page report ruled that HemÅ?in was not suitable for urban renewal
    due to its historical and geographical structure.

    Although the high court has yet to issue a final verdict, TOKÄ°
    scheduled a tender on HemÅ?in Urban Renewal Project for May 20,
    ignoring the earlier rulings and local resistance.

    Nobody knows what will happen next, as only two schools, a forestry
    office, the provincial governor's office and municipality housings
    have been demolished for now. The construction of a public park is
    ongoing, but locals ridicule it, too, stressing the town already lies
    in a naturally beautiful, historically rich area near the Black Sea.

    The HemÅ?in people, or HemÅ?inites, were originally Armenians who fled
    to the Pontus region along the eastern Black Sea as Arab troops
    occupied their homeland in 790. In 1480 the Ottomans conquered the
    area and in 1600 instituted the `devÅ?irme' system, in which suitable
    young boys were taken from Christian families to be educated and often
    converted to Islam to get rid of special taxes that were applied to
    them. Some of the HemÅ?in now live in Armenia, where they have settled
    and have even opened a newspaper called HemÅ?in Hay (HemÅ?in Armenians).

    Ä°smet Å?ahin, a politician who is a prominent member of the HemÅ?in
    community, told the Hürriyet Daily News in 2011 that modern day HemÅ?in
    identify themselves neither as Armenians nor Turks.

    `In recent years, more and more people have begun claiming they are
    discovering their Armenian identity, and I do not find this sincere.
    HemÅ?inites have always identified themselves as HemÅ?inites. If you ask
    whether they are Turks, you would elicit a negative response. If you
    ask whether they are Armenians, again you would elicit a negative
    response. They would only tell you they are HemÅ?inites,' said Å?ahin.

    Today, locals are not dead set against urban renewal, but they claim
    their rights and want their cultural assets be preserved.

    Zekeriya Birlik, the baker of the town, opposed the demolition of his
    shop built in 1928. `We could restore the buildings. Do they really
    have to demolish them?' he asked.

    Emine Kobal, 70, said she has been living in HemÅ?in since she was
    born. She has the means to sell her land and buy a new apartment that
    the government intends to build here, but she resists.

    `I have lived here for 32 years with my husband. Now I live with his
    memory. They told me to sell my land and go away. My heart is here,
    I'm happy here and I need to see my garden and eat from its crops,'
    Kobal says.

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/resistance-to-urban-renewal-in-historic-black-sea-town.aspx?pageID=238&nID=65537&NewsCatID=340




    From: A. Papazian
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