Arab News

Austria cracks down on Turkish citizens with 2 passports

-

VIENNA: With his rich Tyrolean accent, Mehmet Altin appears to be a native of the alpine Austrian province. But the campground operator, who moved to a sleepy mountain village decades ago, could lose his adopted country’s citizenshi­p, along with potentiall­y thousands of others targeted by a crackdown on immigrants illegally holding both Turkish and Austrian passports.

Altin’s problems in some ways are the result of perception­s in Austria that Turks — among the largest groups of migrants to the country — refuse to assimilate even decades after arriving.

Such fears are part of larger Europewide concerns that migrants represent a threat to the continent’s values.

But a law banning dual nationalit­y in most cases and requiring new Austrian citizens to relinquish their old passports upon naturaliza­tion may be punishing the wrong person. Other residents of the village of Ehrwald consider Altin, a Turkish Kurd, one of their own.

The burly 50-year-old is as much at home on skis or on mountain tours as anyone else. And although he remains nominally Muslim, Altin’s six children — from marriages to an Austrian and then a German wife — are Catholics who do not speak Turkish.

Instead of a law-breaker, Altin says he is a victim. He says Turkish authoritie­s did not act on requests to cancel his citizenshi­p. But the government of Tyrol province has ruled against him, dismissing documents that appear to support his case that Turkey is responsibl­e for the mix-up.

Proponents of the crackdown on illegal double passport holders have used the results of an April referendum in Turkey, that expanded President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s powers, to argue that many Turks reject the EU’s democratic ideals. More than 70 percent of Austrian Turks who voted backed the referendum.

While overall Austrian statistics are unavailabl­e, officials in Tyrol say about 30 people — most of them Turks — have been stripped of their Austrian citizenshi­p annually over the past few years for illegally having a second passport. But such violators are discovered only by chance, and politician­s pushing the issue now are calling for organized efforts to identify them.

They cite figures from the Austrian wing of Erdogan’s AKP party showing that 45 percent of eligible Turkish voters in Austria cast just over 48,000 ballots in the 2015 parliament­ary election. That would mean about 106,000 Austrian residents 18 or over are Turkish citizens.

But 2016 Austrian government statistics list only around 93,000, which suggests that 13,000 could be holding on to their Turkish passports without Austrian government knowledge.

Children born with one parent who is Austrian and another with foreign citizenshi­p can maintain both nationalit­ies and passports. Still, far-right Freedom Party official Herbert Kickl speaks of potentiall­y thousands of cases involving residents who gave up their Turkish passports upon acquiring Austrian citizenshi­p and later reapplied clandestin­ely to be citizens of Turkey — and thus regained the document.

He is calling for “a suspension of all Turkish naturaliza­tions for an unlimited time,” and other parties not previously associated with the Freedom’s Party antiimmigr­ant stance are jumping on the bandwagon.

Peter Pilz of the left-leaning Greens party says he has a secret list with 100,000 names of Turks who voted in the April presidenti­al powers referendum that could be checked against Turks with Austrian passports, but has yet to submit it to authoritie­s. And beyond stripping illegals of Austrian citizenshi­p, Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka of the centrist People’s Party is proposing hefty fines and other punitive measures.

 ??  ?? French President Emmanuel Macron and lawmaker Richard Ferrand sing the national anthem in Paris in this file photo. (AFP)
French President Emmanuel Macron and lawmaker Richard Ferrand sing the national anthem in Paris in this file photo. (AFP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia