Turkey: New government order makes it easier to deport Christian workers
By Mark Ellis, Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service
TURKEY (ANS - November 2, 2016)
-- An emergency order issued Oct. 29th will expedite the process to
deport expatriates from Turkey, another blow to Christian workers from
other countries. This month Turkish authorities ordered the deportation
two U.S. Christians.
The
directive removes the requirement for a court decision before a
foreigner can be deported. Now the government, specifically the Ministry
of the Interior, can deport anyone it considers a threat to “public
security” without a judicial order or review, according to Morning Star
News (http://morningstarnews.org/).
The Christians ordered deported recently were accused of being security risks.
The
modification of the law is one of many made by the government following
the failed coup attempt on July 15. Since then, the government enacted a
“state of emergency” that allows it to suspend the law and imprison
anyone it deems a threat to the country.
Officials
say the emergency laws are needed to fight terrorists and those
responsible for the attempted coup, but critics say the moves amount to a
purge of anyone critical of the government, according to Morning Star.
There
was already heightened concern among foreign Christians in Turkey about
being deported or banned from returning to the country. Some have
considered canceling Christmas travel plans.
“It’s
just like they can come to your door and drag you out of your home, and
there is nothing you can do about it,” one expatriate Christian who
asked not to be identified told Morning Star. “It really makes no sense.
They’re going after people who love the country, pray for it, help
improve it and invest their money here, and not those who are really
hurting the country.”
U.S.
Christians, mainly those seen as “active” Christians, are being
targeted by officials who see anyone who isn’t Sunni Muslim as a threat
to national unity, public order and “Turkishness,” according to TEK
spokesman Soner Tufan.
“American
Christians are being targeted as a symptom of larger problems with the
U.S.,” Tufan said, suggesting that shaky relations between the Turkish
government and Washington have to do with Turkish dissatisfaction with
extradition process of Fethullah Gülen, whom the Turkish government
claims was the architect of the coup attempt.
“Turkey wants that man from America, but they won’t give him to them,” Tufan observed.
The
Turkish government is holding one U.S. Christian in a deportation
center without charge. Andrew Brunson, the U.S. pastor of Izmir Dirilis
Church, is trapped in a legal imbroglio. The government has issued a
deportation order and lifetime ban against him for being “a national
security risk” but refuses to deport him. They also refuse to release
him on appeal of his charges.
On
Oct. 7, Izmir police arrested Brunson and his wife Norine, telling them
they would be deported in 15 days and banned from Turkey for life,
according to Morning Star.
The
couple was taken to the Izmir Immigration Centre and refused access to a
U.S. consular official or lawyer, according to religious freedom
advocacy group Middle East Concern (MEC). They were confined together
but denied clean clothes, medicine and other basic provisions until Oct.
13.
On
Oct. 19, officials took Norine Brunson to receive a brief physical,
told her that charges against her had been dismissed and released her.
Andrew
Brunson remains confined in a detention center. The usual deadline for
him to be deported has passed, and in spite of his signing government
papers agreeing to be deported and the lack of any charges against him,
the government refuses to release him.
Brunson
was the second U.S. citizen the government ordered deported in October.
On Saturday (Oct. 29), Ryan D. Keating, 39, a U.S. Christian and
long-time time resident of Turkey, was reunited with his wife and four
children in England after more than 20 days of separation when he was
banned from reentering Turkey.
Keating,
a doctoral student in Philosophy at Ankara University, was detained
when he arrived at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport on Oct. 16. Immigration
officials told him that on Aug. 19, his residency permit had been
revoked for “national security” reasons and the Ministry of the Interior
had issued a lifetime ban on him entering Turkey. After a brief stay in
the detention holding area of the airport, Keating was then placed on
the first flight back to London.
Keating
said he moved to Turkey in 2006, but his interest and attachment to the
country started during a high school student exchange program. On his
return in 2006 to start his doctoral studies, he became involved in his
church and started a discipleship program and a ministry to aid
refugees.
Keating told Morning Star News he thinks the reason he was expelled was because his ministries were “high profile.”
“Several
of the church ministries I have developed or have been in charge of
have been high profile, and in that sense I am an easy target for people
who want to rid the country of Christians,” he said. “The work that we
do with refugees is especially politically sensitive.”
Keating
emphasized that neither he nor his wife have any affiliation with a
political or ideological group in Turkey, “directly or indirectly.”
“We
want to emphasize, we love Turkey and the people of Turkey,” he said.
“We’ve not done anything illegal, and I’ve been careful throughout my
time in Turkey to honor all of the rules and regulations about visas,
about residency, about things related to our ministry that we do. So
it’s especially disappointing when the government labels me as it has to
kick me out unjustly.”
Keating is fighting the decision against him in court.
Photo
captions: Americans, Norine and Andrew Brunson, who were arrested.
(Morning Star News). 2) A popular street is Izmir (Wikipedia). 3) Mark
Ellis.
About the writer: Mark Ellis is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net),and also founder of www.GodReports.com, a
website that shares stories, testimonies and videos from the church
around the world. He is also co-host for “Windows on the World” with ANS
Founder, Dan Wooding, which is aired weekly on the Holy Spirit
Broadcasting Network (http://hsbn.tv).
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