The Borneo Post

Austria’s Turkish community caught in nationalit­y trap

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VIENNA: Alper Yilmaz has no doubt where his home is. “My homeland is Austria, Vienna,” he says.

But with a far-right party sharing power and anti-immigratio­n sentiment generally on the rise in Austria, Yilmaz — along with potentiall­y thousands of other Austrians with Turkish roots — is worried he could be stripped of his citizenshi­p. Except in very special cases, Austria does not allow its citizens to hold dual nationalit­y.

But the far-right and anti-Islam Freedom Party ( FPOe) — junior partner in a ruling coalition with the centre-right Austrian People’s Party (OeVP) — last year claimed to have received a list of Turkish voters which it said could contain tens of thousands of illegal dual nationals.

The affair drew comparison­s to Britain’s ‘Windrush’ scandal, in which scores of British citizens of Caribbean origin were deported or detained because they had not collected the necessary paperwork proving their right be there.

Now many of the Austrians of Turkish origin whose names appear on the list could face a similar administra­tive nightmare. Duygu Ozkan, a journalist for the Die Presse newspaper, said the dual nationalit­y issue had become ‘virtually the only topic of conversati­on’ for Austria’s Turkish community.

Austria, like neighbouri­ng Germany, invited thousands of Turkish citizens to come and work in the 1960s and 1970s, with many staying and putting down roots. — AFP

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