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  • ISTANBUL: Turkey may offer citizenship to Syriacs fleeing war in Syr

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 5 2013


    Turkey may offer citizenship to Syriacs fleeing war in Syria


    5 May 2013 /AYDIN ALBAYRAK, ANKARA

    Turkey is seemingly preparing, with top government officials having in
    recent months called on Syriacs to return to Turkey, to offer Turkish
    citizenship to Syriacs who were or are related to former citizens of
    Turkey and who are now in a difficult situation in war-torn Syria.

    `The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has been working to provide Syriacs
    with Turkish citizenship,' Evgil Türker, head of the Federation of
    Syriac Associations in Turkey said at a conference in Ankara on
    Syriacs in Syria at the beginning of the week. Turkey is actually the
    former homeland of many Syriacs who presently live in Syria and
    Europe, since, in the past, a large number of Syriacs left the country
    because they were ostracized by Muslim society due to their religion
    and were not allowed by the state to enjoy their rights.

    According to estimates, out of a total of 2.5-3 million Syriacs living
    in Syria -- Syriacs believe all Christians, apart from Armenians, in
    Syria to be of Syriac origin based on historical grounds --180,000
    live in Syria's Haseki province, which sits on the Turkish-Syrian
    border.

    `Maybe more than 90 percent of them are people whose elders emigrated
    from Turkey,' Türker told Sunday's Zaman on the sidelines of the
    conference `Syrian Syriacs and Turkey: Building Peace Together.'
    Granting Syriacs Turkish citizenship would not be something
    unimaginable because Türker's fathers and grandfathers were formerly
    registered in Midyat, Mardin province, in the birth registry anyway.

    Calls made in previous months to Syriacs living abroad to convince
    them to return to Turkey, by several leading figures of the government
    such as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and Foreign Minister Ahmet
    DavutoÄ?lu, may be taken as a strong indication of Turkey's intention
    of offering citizenship to those Syriacs in Syria who were, or at
    least whose parents or grandparents were formerly Turkish citizens. A
    Foreign Ministry official who spoke on condition of anonymity also
    believes that recent statements made by top government officials may
    be taken as a sign that Turkey is preparing to take such a step.

    As part of efforts to mend fences with the Syriacs of Turkey, Turkish
    President Abdullah Gül met with leaders of Turkey's Syriac community
    at the Çankaya presidential palace in February. For the first time in
    history, a member of Turkey's Christian minority, Syriac Orthodox
    Archbishop Yusuf Çetin, accompanied a Turkish president on a trip
    abroad, in particular to Sweden, where a large number of Syriacs live.
    DavutoÄ?lu, for his part, met with representatives of the Syriac
    community in Turkey in March and reaffirmed that Turkey was ready to
    extend help in every way possible to its Syriac brothers in Syria.

    Syriacs urge Turkey to adopt a more encompassing discourse, a
    discourse not solely based on Sunnis, but towards opposition groups in
    Syria. Tuma Çelik, Turkey representative of the European Syriac Union
    (ESU), maintained that Turkey has ignored, up until recently, Syriacs
    in its Syria policy, but he also admitted that there have recently
    been some positive developments in that regard. Türker is hopeful.
    `There are indications that Turkey will develop a different attitude
    [from the one in the past],' he said, adding, `It should also take
    Christians [in Syria] into account.' Issou Gouriye, leader of the
    Syriac Union Party, is more cautious in his optimism. `We hear that
    Turkey has taken some positive steps, but the effects haven't, as of
    yet, been felt by us in Syria,' he said at the meeting organized in
    Ankara.

    Although they had, in the past, troubles in living comfortably in
    Turkey, Syriacs see Turkey as the main actor they could possibly turn
    to when in trouble and expect to receive greater help from Turkey. `We
    have lived together for a thousand years. Who else can we lay our
    expectations on, if not Turkey?' Gouriye, who, having studied at a
    Turkish university, can speak Turkish fluently, told Sunday's Zaman.
    `If Turkey is willing to do its part, there is a lot that can be done
    together,' he added.

    Syriacs, who historically see Syria as their homeland, are probably
    one of the most adversely affected ethnic and religious groups in the
    civil war in Syria. Only recently two archbishops from the Syriac
    Orthodox and Melkite (mostly Greek Orthodox) churches were abducted by
    gunmen in Aleppo. Syriacs are worried that attacks against Christians
    aim not only to drive Syriacs out of Syria, land on which they have
    been living for thousands of years, but also to cause division and
    conflict among opposition groups fighting the Bashar al-Assad regime.

    Syriacs' fears are not baseless, considering what happened in Iraq.
    According to Çelik, two-thirds of out of more than 1 million Syriacs
    in Iraq migrated following the American occupation. For the moment,
    the total number of Syriacs who fled the civil war in Syria by seeking
    shelter in a foreign country makes up no more than 1 percent of all
    Syriacs in Syria. But should the civil war reach the province of
    Haseki, where a large number of Syriacs live and where there are no
    major clashes at the moment, the number of Syriacs who may choose to
    flee the country could significantly increase.

    By some estimates, there are presently around 500 Syriacs who have
    come to Turkey from Syria. But Turkey has been building, in the town
    of Midyat in Mardin province, a refugee camp for Syriacs with a
    capacity to accommodate 4,000 people, and another with a capacity of
    6,000 people for Kurds and Arabs who might flee to Turkey. It may be
    out of an expectation that clashes could in the near future reach the
    Haseki region, which lies along some of Turkey's border with Syria and
    which is also densely populated by Kurds, that Turkey is busy with
    camp building.

    As Syria is the only country where Syriacs have a relatively dense
    population, should Syriacs in Syria, as the ones in Iraq have done in
    the past, flee the country because of the civil war, the ethnic group
    will be scattered around the world. That's why the Federation of
    Syriac Associations is not willing to give a helping hand to Syriacs
    of Syria who are trying to emigrate abroad. `The only country where we
    have now a mass population is Syria,' Türker said, defending the
    federation's stance.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-314505-turkey-may-offer-citizenship-to-syriacs-fleeing-war-in-syria.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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