Turkey limits visas for Iraqis, citing illegal immigration
Turkey has restricted entry visas for Iraqis in a bid to limit foreign fighters reaching its territory and stem the flow of migrants and refugees to Europe.
The European Union is banking on Turkish help to alleviate its worst migration crisis since World War II, which saw more than a million people, including tens of thousands from Iraq, make the short sea crossing between Turkey and islands belonging to EU member Greece.
Turkey has also been a transit point for fighters joining the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which controls part of the southern border with Syria.
As of Feb. 10, Iraqis can no longer obtain visas upon arrival and must now apply online, according to information obtained from the Turkish embassy in Baghdad on Feb. 14.
They must also undergo an interview at a Turkish mission in Baghdad or Erbil; those with a valid EU Schengen area visa or an entry visa or residency for the United States, Britain or Ireland are exempted.
There are no fees.
"Thousands of Iraqis remain in Turkey illegally or try to emigrate [to] the West illegally and [the] number of Iraqis detained for their suspected connection to the Daesh terrorist organization is considerable," Turkey's ambassador to Iraq Faruk Kaymakç? said in a statement, using an Arabic acronym for ISIL.
Although over a million people have already crossed into Europe, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an last week said he had told EU officials the time could come when Turkey would "open the gates" for migrants to travel to Europe.
More than a year after ISIL seized a third of Iraq's territory, threatened to overrun the capital and declared a modern caliphate, a pervasive sense of hopelessness has pushed many Iraqis to...
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