*Turkey:
*Press release
*AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL*
*PRESS RELEASE*
23 October 2009
*Turkey: The right of refugees to return with dignity*
Amnesty International calls on the Turkish authorities to allow Turkish
citizens of Kurdish origin to return without fear of harassment and
discrimination as refugees begin to leave the Mahmur
camp in northern Iraq.
Twenty-six Turkish citizens of Kurdish origin returned to Turkey from the
refugee camp in Iraq earlier this week and many others are expected to follow.
The UN-administered Mahmur camp is currently home to
some 11,000 refugees, who fled Turkey during the 1990s to escape human rights
abuses following armed clashes between the outlawed Kurdish Workers Party (PKK)
and the Turkish army.
Nearly half of the people living in the camp are children, many of whom were
born following their families’ flight from Turkey.
"Everyone has the right to leave any country, including their own, and to
return of their own free will. This right is guaranteed in conventions to which
Turkey is a party,” said Andrew Gardner, Amnesty
International’s expert on Turkey.
“The Turkish authorities must not only guarantee the right, they must create
the conditions so that people and their families, some of whom may not have
lived in Turkey at all, feel welcome. They must be able to return with
dignity.”
Amnesty International calls on the Turkish authorities to: allow its nationals
to return without any fear of harassment, discrimination, arbitrary detention
or prosecution on account of having left or remained outside the coutry; create conditions conducive to the refugees’
voluntary return and
reintegration; respect the leading role of the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in
promoting, facilitating and coordinating voluntary repatriation and ensure
UNHCR’s direct and unhindered access to all returning refugees in order to
monitor their situation; where refugees have lost their nationality, arrange
for its restoration, as well as granting it to children born outside the
territory;
in the event of refugees wishing to visit Turkey to assess the conditions there
in the context of possible repatriation, facilitate such visits in cooperation
with UNHCR, and the relevant Iraqi
authorities.
*Background*
The fundamental human right to return is enshrined in Article 13 (2) of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights.This right also
forms part of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, to which
Turkey is party. International standards also fundamentally require that any
returns must be voluntary in nature based on a fully free and informed decision
to return and facilitated to allow refugees to return in safety and with
dignity.