Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 29 – Turkish police
have begun detaining emigres from the North Caucasus on suspicion of
connections with terrorist groups. The diasporas have responded by collecting
signatures on appeals to the government calling for the end of these detentions
and respect for the lives of the people involved.
Many North Caucasians have fled to
Turkey over the last two decades because of Russian oppression in their
homelands and because there are significant émigré communities there they can
join. (On the history of these, see Lowell Bezanis, “Soviet Muslim Emigres in
the Republic of Turkey,” Central Asian
Survey, 13:1(1994): 59-180.)
If Turkey ceases to welcoming to
these communities, that could lead either to the flight of many of their
members to the countries of Western Europe or to more violence in the North
Caucasus, if people there feel they have nowhere to go and thus must fight for
their rights in their own lands.
The Kavkaz-Uzel news agency reports
today that there has been a minimum of several dozen detentions of North
Caucasus emigres including Circassians, Chechens, and other groups by the
Turkish authorities in recent days. Among those arrested, some of whom have
been released, are women and children as well as adult males (kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/311739/).
Many of those rounded up, Ali
Viskhadzhiyev of the Chechen diaspora group Kavkazder says, have legal
residence status in Turkey and have not been charged with any crimes. They have
been arrested only on suspicion of contacts with extremist groups, something
that has added to fears in these communities.
In the last few days, émigré groups
have turned to the Internet to collect signatures on petitions to the Turkish
authorities asking that their compatriots be released (twitter.com/hashtag/Kafkasyal%C4%B1MuhacirlereSahipC%C4%B1k?src=hash
and change.org/p/kafkasyali-muhacirlerin-haksiz-iadesinin-durdurulmasini-talep-ediyoruz).
These efforts have garnered more than 1500
signatures so far, and activists have handed over the petitions to Turkish
immigration authorities. Some activists, including Erol Karayel of the
Cherkesfed group, say that officials have promised that they will look into the
cases and sort things out.
But this has done little to calm the fears
of the North Caucasians in Turkey. One of them, who identified himself only as
Tamerlan, spoke for many when he said the following: “When I left home, I had a
choice to go to Europe and ask for asylum or go to Turkey to which at that time
many of my friends were going.”
“I chose Turkey although I had all the
things needed to get asylum in Europe. I wanted to live in a Muslim country
where I could freely practice my religion and where my daughters would not have
their hijabs torn from their heads in school.
Now, I understand this was a mistake, but I cannot do anything to change
it,” he concluded.
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