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LOCAL > Turkey-Germany migration two-way street, figures show

Around 30,000 Turks migrate to Germany annually five decades after the start of a migration wave, according to figures. However, Turkey is seeing a brain drain from the eurozone’s largest economy

A worker removes parts of a power pole in the German city of Meckenheim. Anonymous job applications, similar to the practice in the United States, are needed en Germany, academic Demir says.

A worker removes parts of a power pole in the German city of Meckenheim. Anonymous job applications, similar to the practice in the United States, are needed en Germany, academic Demir says.

Erdem Güneş Erdem Güneş erdem.gunes@hdn.com.tr

A recent wave of Turkish migration back from Germany is not a one-way street, as around 30,000 Turkish citizens also move to Europe’s powerhouse annually in hopes of building a life there, according to official statistics and academics.

More than 50,000 Turks return from Germany to Turkey per year, recent figures provided by the Germany-based Turkish European Foundation for Education and Scientific Studies (TAVAK) have revealed.

On the contrary, 30,171 Turks migrated to Germany in 2010, post-doc senior researcher at Hamburg University, Yaşar Aydın told the Daily News on March 15 in a phone interview, highlighting a “circular migration and mobility.” “At least two thirds of these 30,000 people who migrated to Germany are not on their first trip to here, which shows that there is a circular movement between Germany and Turkey,” he said.

New visas for families

In 2010, Germany provided “family reunification visas” to 7,456 Turkish citizens, some 2,351 people went to Germany for higher education and another 1,340 applied for refugee status, according to the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees.

TAVAK’s study, made public earlier this week, said that some 193,000 Turks living in Germany returned to Turkey between 2007 and 2011.

Aydın also said high-income groups of Turks are considering returning to Turkey, as opposed to low-income ones.

Similarly, İdris Akkuzu, an assistant professor at Istanbul’s Maltepe University, said remigration from Germany could not be considered disengagement, as a large majority of people who return are “trying their chances in Turkey,” which does not mean that they will not return to Germany.

 “The basic reason for this returning trend is a pushing effect by Germany and a pulling effect from Turkey. Modernization of cities in Turkey and a more discriminatory workers’ code in Germany are forcing young, educated Turks to move to Turkey,” Akkuzu told the Daily News.

‘Not a massive return’

Instead of calling it “a permanent return,” it is more appropriate to see it as a “trying of chances,” Akkuzu added.

“People from Turkey in Germany are a big diaspora now; the case is not a massive return.”
In particular, 30,000 academics of Turkish origin return to Turkey from Germany every year, according to the Turkish Community in Germany’s (TGD) figures, Ayşe Demir, the vice president of TGD, noted.

“A welcoming culture is still not settled in Germany. Young and educated people are seeking ways to find a job here desperately,” she said, adding that the brain drain of Turks from Germany to Turkey is on the rise.

“Germany has only recently accepted that it is an immigration [destination] country, but discrimination in employment policies remains a serious problem. Turkish students who hold the same degrees and diplomas as their German colleagues are not being accepted to those positions as easily as Germans or some other minorities are,” Demir said.

March/16/2013

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cezer skonore

3/17/2013 4:52:58 PM

In 90's, when I stop by German airports to travel between the US and Turkey, I could detect Turks (politicly correct way Turkiyeli) with plastic bags (rather than proper travel gear) they are carrying their stuff in. You couldn't see them in those airport cafes and restaurants. In my later trips, mostly Munich airport, the cafes were full of Turks (who speak German) with their entire families, eat and drink. I think now they are richer, they can live in Turkey or Germany. Some prefer Turkey.

Eric Martin

3/17/2013 12:14:16 PM

I think it's good they're coming back! It's Erdogan and the economy stupid! It's stability and growth. Don't like the statistics about students going to Germany for higher education. What's wrong with Turkish colleges?

Hans-Joachim Zierke

3/17/2013 7:42:19 AM

Faruk Beisser (although that won't be your real name), perhaps you should make up your mind: Either the motivations for returning aren't known, or you know them, but argueing both at the same time might not be taken seriously.

Agnostic Turk

3/17/2013 3:54:51 AM

Fertility rate in Turkey is going down. Turkey started to become a destination country for immigrants. If we are to take in immigrants, what better than Turkish immigrants? I am quite happy that Turks who moved to Europe in the past are coming back home. Turks faced many problems, including racist attacks, in Germany, but we should still be thankful to Germany. When our economy was bad, it provided jobs for our people and through them, we learnt a lot from Germans in sports/business/academy etc.

C B Mays

3/17/2013 2:59:55 AM

So how many ethic Germans are immigrating to Turkey? You mention only the Turks who live in Germany and are returning to Turkey. To be a true two way street, the ethic Germans who come to Turkey must be factored in also.

mr who

3/17/2013 12:49:42 AM

Who working on a power pole thank you that is the German people for letting a Turk work on a power pole it couldn’t be that bad in Germany get with it and start talking all German dialects and have a good German beer now and again and don’t be naughty and eat pork

Suhail Shafi

3/16/2013 9:43:35 PM

This article is interesting but does not explore the role endemic racism and near institutionalized racism against minorities, especially Turks plays in causing German Turks to leave Germany.

Faruk Beisser

3/16/2013 11:15:30 AM

Another very sorry reason for ''Turks'' leaving is the fact that these are young women and even today are forced to return to Turkey to marry whomever the parents have chosen, often a relative.

Faruk Beisser

3/16/2013 11:13:00 AM

Strange, how the real truth behind the so-called ''returning'' is masked with charges of discrimination ( which does exist, mainly against the uneducated unemployed living off welfare benefits). German statistics does NOT show why anyone is leaving the country, so that it is easy to claim anything. The truth is, that many of the returnees are not returning, but are employed by German companies that have established business in Turkey, are establishing business or planing to do so.

Richard Wyatt

3/16/2013 9:03:33 AM

"Turkish students who hold the same degrees and diplomas as their German colleagues are not being accepted to those positions as easily as Germans or some other minorities are." German employers must be basing their decisions on past experience.
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