Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Turkey committed to protecting rights of migrants, the vulnerable

Marking Human Rights Day, top Turkish officials underlined the country’s efforts in fighting inequaliti­es, racism, Islamophob­ia and xenophobia

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TURKEY will continue to defend the rights of migrants and the vulnerable across the globe, the country’s senior officials said Friday, marking Human Rights Day.

“We lend a helping hand to every innocent and wronged without exception with the belief that a fairer world is possible,” President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said in a video message for a program of his ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) on the occasion of Human Rights Day.

“Fascist implementa­tions that take away people’s basic rights and freedoms and separate people according to their roots, beliefs, colors and appearance have become ordinary. Even though it shows only the tip of the iceberg, statistics display the extent to which hostility toward Islam and xenophobia has grown,” the president said.

“Last year, the number of hate crimes has doubled compared with the previous years. Again last year, attacks on migrants in three European countries in which the highest number of our citizens live have exceeded 3,000.”

Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu also said on Friday that the country will defend the rights of asylum-seekers that it is hosting as well as of those whose human rights have been violated throughout the world.

In a message on the occasion of the 73rd anniversar­y of the United Nations Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, Çavuşoğlu said that Turkey reaches the needy on the field in a fast and effective manner while pioneering the shaping of significan­t initiative­s at the table.

Turkey hosts nearly 4 million refugees – more than any country in the world. After the Syrian civil war broke out in 2011, Turkey adopted an “open-door policy” for people fleeing the conflict, granting them “temporary protection” status.

Turkey has been a key transit point for irregular migrants who want to cross into Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecutio­n such as the Syrian civil war. Through its March 2016 agreement with the European Union, Turkey was key in bringing down migrant numbers and alleviatin­g the crisis.

He stated that the experience­s and challenges faced around the world since 1948 showed the value of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, which aims to protect human rights and enable individual­s to lead their lives in accordance with human dignity.

“Our country continues to take steps focused on human rights in order to remove the effect of the difficult conditions created by the new coronaviru­s (COVID-19) on especially women, children and the elderly,” Çavuşoğlu pointed out.

Çavuşoğlu also said Turkey has observed that rising racism, xenophobia, Islamophob­ia and hate speech throughout the world is threatenin­g peace and violating the freedom of thought and faith guaranteed by the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.

“In all internatio­nal platforms of which we are members, we bring up the dangers posed by these harmful tendencies and lead initiative­s to tackle them,” he added, saying that Ankara draws attention to the importance of the culture of living together.

Anti-Muslim hatred has significan­tly risen in Europe in recent years. Far-right extremism and xenophobia have fueled Islamophob­ia in Western countries, where terrorist attacks by Daesh and al-Qaida as well as a migrant crisis are used as excuses to legitimize those views. Turkish officials, including Erdoğan, have frequently urged European decision-makers and politician­s to take a stance against racism and other types of discrimina­tion that have threatened the lives of millions of people living within the bloc’s borders.

Erdoğan had said previously at the U.N. General Assembly and in his book with the same title that a fairer world is possible. The president’s book, “A Fairer World Is Possible,” carries an in-depth explanatio­n of Turkey’s search for justice for all humanity.

Pointing to the dilemmas of global politics, especially injustice, the refugee crisis, internatio­nal terrorism and anti-Islam rhetoric in the book, Erdoğan reveals the discrimina­tion and double standards in the world with the example of the United Nations.

While the book also includes proposals for the restructur­ing of the U.N., it recommends the implementa­tion of a perspectiv­e summed up in the phrase “The world is bigger than five” and focuses on changing the structure of the U.N. Security Council.

On the other side, the head of the Turkish Human Rights and Equality Agency (TİHEK), Muharrem Kılıç, on Friday similarly called for reviewing and restructur­ing of the mechanisms to protect human rights at the U.N. scale.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency (AA), Kılıç hailed the creation of the declaratio­n but said that despite this, humanitari­an tragedies are continuing while asylum-seekers and those of different ethnic roots are left outside the universal protection mechanism.

 ?? ?? Turkish coast guard teams rescue migrants off Aegean coasts, İzmir, western Turkey, Dec. 4, 2021.
Turkish coast guard teams rescue migrants off Aegean coasts, İzmir, western Turkey, Dec. 4, 2021.

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