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ANKARA: What Illegal Armenian Workers Remind Us

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  • ANKARA: What Illegal Armenian Workers Remind Us

    WHAT ILLEGAL ARMENIAN WORKERS REMIND US
    By Kadir Dikbas

    Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 14 2006

    Wishing to protect the "genocide" lie with a law, France keeps
    insisting on its hostile attitude. The bill was passed in the French
    parliament yesterday. The next step is the Senate, and Turkey is now
    discussing what should be done about the bill.

    One of the suggestions put forward is to deport illegal Armenian
    citizens, estimated to be 40,000-70,000, who are working in Turkey.

    This issue, that had not been discussed very much previously, flared
    up after the French parliament began discussing a bill to penalize
    those who deny the events of 1915 as genocide.

    It is hard to understand why the illegal immigration issue had been
    disregarded until now, despite a systematic campaign to portray Turks
    as perpetrators of the so-called Armenian genocide and France trying
    to distort history through political means. Now we are rightly asking
    why this issue of illegal employment has been overlooked when it is
    extremely difficult for our citizens to find a job. However, there
    are also some who think these poor workers should not be disturbed.

    The truth is that Turkey is facing serious illegal labor problems.

    The problem is not only limited to Armenians. Many people from
    neighboring countries come to Turkey and work in all kinds of
    businesses. Coming as tourists, workers from Eastern Europe, the
    Middle East and some Asian countries usually work in small and
    middle-size enterprises, particularly in construction, molding and
    casting, leather, textiles, plastic, agriculture, shipping, loading
    and unloading, cleaning, sales and the hotel industry.

    Because they work illegally, they earn very low wages under difficult
    conditions and may be exploited. Apart from these workers, other
    illegal aliens are engaged in prostitution, smuggling and drugs.

    Turkey began to import labor officially after 1960, but the country
    first confronted the inflow of illegal labor on a large scale after the
    disintegration of the USSR. Today, illegal immigration has reached
    huge dimensions. These people come to Turkey as tourists with a
    one-month or three-month visa but do not return to their respective
    countries. Some renew their visas and continue business as usual.

    Others enter Turkey illegally.

    Nobody knows the exact number of illegal workers in Turkey but it
    is estimated to be one million. The most noteworthy report on this
    issue is the one prepared by the Turkish Labor and Social Security
    Ministry, entitled "Informal Employment and Employment of Illegal
    Foreign Workers." The following lines attract attention in the 2004
    report: "As no clear data could be obtained on the number of illegal
    foreign workers in our country, there is no official figure on the
    anticipated extent of illegal foreign employment in Turkey.

    Nonetheless, it is estimated that illegal foreign employment in Turkey
    has reached very serious dimensions, and the numbers are clearly in
    the hundreds of thousands." This figure is estimated to be between
    500,000 and one million, according to the Confederation of Turkish
    Trade Unions, the report said.

    Even though the dimension and the damage caused by illegal foreign
    employment cannot be fully determined, ordinary citizens living or
    spending their holidays, particularly in Istanbul and tourist regions,
    can clearly see the scope and negative effects of illegal labor.

    We all know that unemployment is one of Turkey's biggest problems
    today. With 2.2 million people currently out of work, our unemployment
    rate stands at 8.8 percent.

    Illegal foreign workers employed for low salaries do not only increase
    the number of unemployed Turkish citizens but also decrease revenue
    for insurance premiums and taxes. Another dimension of the issue
    is the transfer of income. We think many foreigners registered as
    tourists bring foreign currency to the country but in fact it is just
    the opposite. Even if we calculate on the basis that every illegal
    worker transfers an average of $1,000 a year -- at least -- to his
    country, the total amount is around $1 billion.

    Even Northern Cyprus fines Turks working illegally in the country
    and returns them to Turkey. Does Turkey, which should give priority
    to its own unemployed citizens, have the luxury of disregarding a
    million illegal foreign workers?
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