The economic factors affecting emigration process in georgia the economic fac...Azer Dilanchiev
The problem of emigration become one of the vital problem not only in Georgia but in all developing countries. The aim of this
paper is to analyses the economic factors that are affecting to this process in Georgia. The paper is based on the regression
analysis between economic variables and the level of emigration between years of 2000 to 2014.Regression analysis model
shows 80, 7 percent significance level of economic indicators.
For the economic reason the emigration disposition is still high in the population of Georgia. Despite the fact that the intensity
of stationary emigration in recent years fall, the level of illegal emigration is still high. The possible further emigration process
would worsen the demographic situation in Georgia.
Keywords: emigration, Gini index, Georgia, unemployment
The economic factors affecting emigration process in georgia the economic fac...Azer Dilanchiev
The problem of emigration become one of the vital problem not only in Georgia but in all developing countries. The aim of this
paper is to analyses the economic factors that are affecting to this process in Georgia. The paper is based on the regression
analysis between economic variables and the level of emigration between years of 2000 to 2014.Regression analysis model
shows 80, 7 percent significance level of economic indicators.
For the economic reason the emigration disposition is still high in the population of Georgia. Despite the fact that the intensity
of stationary emigration in recent years fall, the level of illegal emigration is still high. The possible further emigration process
would worsen the demographic situation in Georgia.
Keywords: emigration, Gini index, Georgia, unemployment
Kobani is Falling to ISIS in Syria. Kurd Protests Explode in Turkey.
1. Kobani is Falling to ISIS in Syria. Kurd Protests Explode in
Turkey.
Kobani is Falling to ISIS in Syria. Kurd Protests Explode in Turkey. - The Daily Beast
GAZIANTEP, Turkey -- It is like old times. Kurdish protestors clashing with Turkish riot police in
towns across southeastern Turkey and ultranationalists taking to the streets, too, flashing the
symbol of the Grey Wolves, a violent far-right group that was responsible for more than 700 murders
in the vicious political violence that engulfed the country in the 1970s.
But the events provoking this madness are absolutely current. Just across the border in Syria, the
city of Kobani, once home to more than 50,000 people - most of them Kurds - is about to fall to the
forces of the so-called Islamic State, better known as ISIS or ISIL. Kurdish militias - men and women
- have held off the savage jihadists for weeks now despite being outnumbered and outgunned. In the
last few days U.S. airstrikes have slowed the ISIS advances, but not enough. ISIS has taken more
than half the town, including major government buildings.
All the while the Turkish government, with its tanks, its air force, and its 300,000 soldiers on active
duty has done nothing but watch from a mile or two away across the border. Nothing but watch, that
is, and prevent Kurdish reinforcements from crossing the frontier to help defend Kobani.
Now the flames spreading from this fight are fanning out fast across Turkey, threatening to wreck a
faltering two-year-long peace process between the Turkish government and the outlawed Kurdistan
Workers' Party (PKK) to end formally 30-years of insurgency.
Turkish inaction over Kobani and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's refusal to intervene militarily is
stirring Kurdish claims that Turkey's leader is complicit with the jihadists--or at least standing back
to let them snatch the town from the YPG, a Syrian offshoot of the PKK.
For three nights now Kurdish protestors, riot police and Turkish ultranationalists have battled each
other in dozens of towns across the southeast as well as in Istanbul and the capital Ankara. More
than 30 have died so far in the violence and more than 1000 people have been arrested, according to
Turkish Interior Minister Efkan Ala. And for the first time in years soldiers are on the streets of the
Kurdish towns of Diyarbak?r, Mardin, Van and Batman, where curfews have been imposed.
"There is a beautiful moon and the smoke of tear gas."
The lockdowns have not stopped the protests. Armed with Molotov cocktails, furious Kurds have
been firebombing schools, government buildings and political party offices.
In Diyarbak?r, a PKK stronghold, protestors defied orders to remain indoors. "Some people stay at
home and just make noise in protest," a resident reported via email. "But others are going out. The
city is crazy. Helicopters are hovering overhead the whole time. There are no cars or taxis but there
are tanks." Then she added: "There is a beautiful moon and the smoke of tear gas."
Residents also reported black smoke billowing from tires set alight by protestors on the outskirts of
the city, where shanty settlements are home to hundreds of Kurdish villagers displaced in the 1990s
by the Turkish army's scorched-earth campaign against the PKK.
2. The protests are clearly not spontaneous and are meant as warning to Erdogan that all hell will
break loose when or if Kobani, the third largest Kurdish town in Syria, falls. Just before the protests
started to kick-off PKK activists who had been camped out in Turkish villages neighboring Kobani to
express their solidarity with the Kurdish defenders battling the jihadists disappeared. Presumably
they returned to their hometowns to organize the urban protests.
Turkey's state-run Anadolu headlined its story on this week's violence sweeping the southeast: "A
series of deaths are the result of Pro-Kurdish protests around the country." But the violence and
provocation isn't all coming from one side.
Ominously, Turkish ultranationalists have been emboldened. In Gaziantep, where there is a small
Kurdish population, Thursday night the streets were filled with the sounds of urban battle. Near the
city's main university an ultranationalist mob waved machetes and clubs and brandished shotguns
and other firearms. Within minutes a gun battle between ultranationalists and Kurds over the fate of
Kobani developed, leaving at least four dead and more than 20 injured.
And in Diyarbak?r Kurdish Hizbullah, a militant Islamist group that in the 1990s battled the PKK,
made a re-appearance. For the past few years Kurdish Hizbullah has been seeking to become a
political actor, forming a party called Huda-Par (Free Cause), but members of the party shot at
Kurdish protestors on Wednesday night, reportedly killing two.
The involvement of Huda-Par and the Grey Wolves in the violence rocking the southeast augurs
badly. Both shadowy ultranationalist groups have strong ties with the Turkish intelligence services.
In 1992 Turkish journalist Halit G?ngen was murdered after exposing the links between Kurdish
Hizbullah and Turkish intelligence, which included military training. Several other journalists
exploring the ties in the 1990s between Turkey's "deep state" and ultranationalists suffered similar
fates.
Kurdish leaders now accuse Turkish
intelligence, which has never been happy
with the peace process, of egging on the
ultranationalists in a bid to sabotage for
good a deal between Ankara and the
PKK. Diyarbakir's mayor, Gultan Kisanak,
argues that ultranationalist attacks are
the "government's Plan B" - a bid to
discipline the PKK and to make clear that
Kurdish protests and threats will be met by the tactics employed by the Turkish military and spooks
in the 1990s.
3. But there are also Kurdish elements opposed to the peace process eager to stir the pot. Twitter
accounts associated with the youth wing of the PKK have been urging supporters to attack Huda-Par
and several of their members have been killed in the violence in recent days. At least five Islamists
were killed, according to Seyhmus Tanrikulu, a Huda-Par leader.
The party's offices have also been attacked. And the PKK activists are suspected of being behind a
gun attack in the eastern city of Bingol that led to the deaths of six people, including two policemen.
Turkish officials see the pro-Kurdish protests as a bid by the PKK to blackmail them into intervening
in Kobani - something Erodgan is refusing to bow to, and something the country's generals are
unlikely to accept.