Turkey’s marginalised Christians feel threatened by nationalism

Fear among Turkey's already marginalised Christians
is growing as President Recep Tayyip Erdoğanh
has been increasingly pushing nationalist policies, Politico said on Wednesday.
For Turkey's Christians, the decision to reconvert
the Hagia Sophia into a mosque represents yet another blow to their already
marginalised community, Politico said.
“There is an Islamist and nationalist atmosphere
that makes it uncomfortable for Christians in Turkey. I fear this [conversion]
might cause tensions, although today is not harder than it was a hundred years
ago," Politico cited Yetvart Danzikyan, the editor-in-chief of Istanbul's
Armenian newspaper Agos, as saying.
Hagia Sophia's reconversion was only the latest
"step of nationalism" by Erdoğan's
conservative government, Danzikyan said.
"All Christian minorities and seculars are
unhappy and feel fear. Some younger Christians are thinking of leaving Turkey
and moving to Western countries," he said.
Erdoğan has long been
accused of adopting a mixture of Ottomanism and Islamist policies, and trying
to scapegoat religious minorities for his failures.