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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, September 16, 2018
Off to Turkey: Iranians flee one troubled economy for another
Iran’s economic crisis has sent Iranians – and their savings – to Turkey, a new wave of immigrants on a well-worn path

ranians have bought more Turkish properties in 2018 than all of last year (Iconicbestiary/Freepik.com)
Rohollah Faghihi-Ece Goksedef-Wednesday 12 September 2018
TEHRAN and ISTANBUL – His parents begged him to stay, but soon 33-year-old Darush Mozafari will leave Iran for Turkey, possibly forever.
Over the past decade, the civil engineering graduate has worked a variety of jobs, saving up for an eventual move.
Iran’s recent economic crisis has sped up his plans: he’s submitted his
letter of resignation at the construction company where he works.
To survive and to have a better life, we chose to migrate to Turkey,- Ali, Iranian living in Ankara.
However, he’ll be leaving with much lighter pockets than he had hoped
after the rial lost around two-thirds of its value against the dollar
this year.
“Over one night, I lost half of it after the US president issued an
ultimatum and then killed the nuclear deal,” Mozafari said, sitting at
an immigration company to finalise paperwork for his visa.
Darush is not the only one leaving Iran. Although official statistics
haven’t been released, immigration advisors in the country say the
numbers of Iranians who have decided to start a new life elsewhere has
jumped significantly.
And for many, that next home is Turkey.
Since the Islamic Revolution in 1979 when nearly two million fled to
Turkey, Iranians have tread a well-worn path to their neighbouring
country for a variety of economic, religious and social reasons,
particularly at times of political upheaval.
Many have come to study, start a new business or invest in property,
saying they find better quality education and greater employment and
investment opportunities.
And now the currency crisis in Iran has set off yet another wave, but
this time those willing to make the move will be trading one troubled
economy for another.

The value of the Turkish lira has plummeted by more than 40 percent
since the start of the year amid concern over the country’s monetary
policy and as a diplomatic row between Ankara and Washington has
intensified.
But this hasn’t put off Iranians. According to the Turkish Statistical
Institute, TUIK, the number of properties bought by Iranians in Turkey
jumped in the first six months of the year to 944 compared to 792 in all
of 2017.
Their motivations include readily available loans from Turkish banks and
a sense that their assets, which are currently losing value in Iran,
will be in a safe place – or at least a safer place.
“To survive and to have a better life, we chose to migrate to Turkey,” said Ali, an Iranian living in Ankara.
“Iranian currency has lost its value, even against Turkey’s," he says.
Still, the Turkish lira is more affordable for Iranians than the euro or
the dollar.
"That’s why Iranian’s first step would always be Turkey, even when they actually want to migrate to Europe or America.”
Home sweet home?
Google "buying house in Turkey" in Persian and tens of pages will turn
up, each suggesting a new way to buy a home or get a residency permit.
Reza Kami, chairman of the Iran-Turkey Chamber of Commerce, based in
Tehran said Iranians have purchased around 1,000 homes and apartments in
Turkey since the spring. Most are worth between $50,000 and $200,000,
and the purchaser is automatically qualified for a residency permit.

Despite this, many of the purchases are most likely purely for investment, Kami said.
"Besides easy regulations and no need to get visas, people's predictions
about their assets losing their value have played a key role in their
decisions,” he said.
Mohsen Azarnejad, a consultant at a private emigration company,
disagrees: for most Iranians buying property in the country, Turkey is
home sweet home.
"People are mostly going to Turkey in order to live there,” Arzanejad
said. “This wave has been intensified during the past four months."
Istanbul, and the resort towns of Antalya and Alanya are the three main cities that Iranians prefer, he said.
But given Turkey’s own financial woes and contentious relations with the
US, now may not be the moment for leaving Iran behind, said Hassan
Sabouri, a consultant for a different emigration company.
"People are going to Turkey for both life and emigration. But I don’t
personally advise anyone to sell everything he has in Iran and go to
Turkey to live,” he said. “That is an unpredictable future and it is too
risky.”
‘I feel free here’
But for many Iranians, moving to Turkey has been about more about
prospects for education and employment than cold hard investment.
An Iranian who has been in Turkey for eight years and works in the
Association for Solidarity with Asylum Seekers and Migrants (ASAM), one
of the biggest organisations helping immigrants in Turkey, told MEE that
in the past six months, the number of Iranian migrants who have come to
ASAM for guidance has increased by 25 percent. He spoke on condition of
anonymity because he is not authorised to give interviews.
Some are coming with saved money and will try to find work or start a business.
The quality of education is not good in Iran, and also it’s not a perfect place for youth. There is social pressure, religious pressure. I feel free here in Turkey- Ali, Iranian living in Turkey
“If they can earn more and settle down, they call their relatives or
friends who are jobless or cannot earn enough in Iran. Some of them open
new businesses in Turkey, partnering with a Turkish citizen, which
makes the paperwork and official process much easier,” he said.
Others will be students whose parents can afford to send them to study
in Turkey, who may later seek asylum in Europe, the US and Canada after
graduation because “it’s easier to go to the West from Turkey than it is
in Iran,” he said.
Seven years ago, Ali was one of these students. Originally from Tehran,
Ali came to study and now works for a foundation run by a government
ministry. Ali is an Azeri Turk, a Turkish-speaking ethnic group mostly
concentrated in northwest Iran, along the Turkish, Armenian and
Azerbaijan borders, and estimated to make up one-fourth of Iran’s
population.
“Some of them say they are facing discrimination,” he said. “But in Tehran, I never experienced such discrimination.”
Studying abroad was always Ali’s dream, following in the footsteps of
cousins and friends. “The quality of education is not good in Iran, and
also it’s not a perfect place for youth. There is social pressure,
religious pressure. I feel free here in Turkey,” he said.
University students at an Istanbul library (AFP)
With the savings from the small shop his father runs, Ali’s family was able to send him to Turkey.
“They could save some money for me out of concerns for my future. We
didn’t know if I could find a job after graduation, because there are so
many jobless people in Iran. There are people around us who can’t find a
job for many years,” he said.
“My father bought my ticket to Ankara and put some money in my pocket.”
Under an agreement between Turkey and Iran, citizens of both countries
can travel to the other country without a visa and stay for 90 days as
tourists.
“In these 90 days, I could easily adapt because I know Turkish. I took
the university entrance exam and later started my education in Ankara
University, in the department of history. I graduated in 2015,” he said.
Ali said he wasn’t sure if he would stay after university when he first
arrived. But as the years have rolled by, and particularly as the
economic crisis unfolds in Iran, he said he is going to stay right where
he is.

