[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 152 (Tuesday, October 29, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6837]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PUTIN OPPRESSION OF AHISKA TURKS
(Mr. KINZINGER of Illinois asked and was given permission to address
the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. KINZINGER of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, I was stunned to see Russian
President Vladimir Putin disparage American exceptionalism a few weeks
ago. Simply put, Mr. Putin's human rights record leaves much to be
desired, including his treatment of Ahiska Turks. A distinct minority,
they are severely persecuted by top Russian authorities in Putin's
government solely for their ethnicity and religion.
During Mr. Putin's first term, the State Department designated Ahiska
Turks as a group of special humanitarian concern. Since then, 12,000
Turks have resettled in America, including many in Illinois and in my
district. However, 80,000 Ahiska Turks remain in Russia, and they
routinely face discrimination and persecution in areas of their lives
that we often take for granted. In an ethnic cleansing campaign, Stalin
uprooted and resettled Ahiska Turks to central Asia from their
ancestral lands in Georgia in 1944. Unable to return, they have since
been perennial refugees in Central Asia and Russia.
This is the reality of Putin's Russia: in Russia, people are
routinely and severely discriminated against, tortured, even killed,
and are economically and financially repressed.
When given the freedom to chase the American Dream, these same Ahiska
Turks have fulfilled their potential in less than a decade. I will let
my colleagues make their own determinations about which nation is
exceptional.
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