Turkey claims Michigan restaurateur misled U.S. about terrorist tiesTurkish officials claim Michigan restaurant owner Ibrahim Parlak has misled authorities about past ties to terrorism, allegations Parlak and his attorney refute as they fight to avoid his deportation.
"Ibrahim Parlak has deliberately misled the U.S. authorities about his criminal background, his membership and activities in PKK, which has been listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the U.S. and the EU," Umut Acar, consulate general of the Republic of Turkey, said in a letter to two of Parlak's supporters, U.S. Rep. Fred Upton, R-St. Joseph, and U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Illinois.
Parlak's attorney, Robert Carpenter, said the letter is full of "fictional, defamatory statements," including claims Parlak, a Turkish immigrant, escaped from a Turkish prison prior to seeking asylum in the U.S. He also disputes claims in the letter Parlak was involved in a "terror mission" that led to a firefight on the Syrian-Turkish border in 1988 and the deaths of two Turkish border patrol officers, and that he "managed to evade U.S. authorities, open and operate a restaurant in Michigan, and lead a secret life."
Parlak left Turkey after being convicted on charges related to his support of the Kurdish separatist movement and immigrated to the U.S. in 1991. He owns Café Guilistan in Berrien County's Harbert, having earlier owned a restaurant by that name in downtown Kalamazoo.
Parlak was granted asylum in the U.S. in 1992, but immigration officials began efforts to deport him in 2004 because of his previous ties in Turkey to the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, which was classified as a terrorist group by the U.S. Department of State in 1997. He was arrested in 2004 and jailed for 10 months before a federal judge ordered his release.
Parlak has won numerous deferrals of deportation by the U.S. government, the latest of which had been set to expire in December. However, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security granted a 90-day extension of his deferral through March 22 as he and Carpenter seek relief.
Their motion before the Board of Immigration Appeals, filed in December, seeks to have Parlak's case reopened and re-examined.
"It's just like living a bad movie over and over," Parlak said this week of living with the constant threat of deportation. "It's not a good feeling, just lots of frustration and exhaustion ... It's not a way to live."
Carpenter said the consulate's Feb. 8 letter is the first clear indication that Turkey's government wants Parlak returned. "They want him back and bad things are going to happen if they get him back," he said.
His attorney contends Parlak is likely to be tortured or killed if U.S. immigration officials send him to back Turkey and filed his motion for relief with the Board of Immigration Appeals under the Convention Against Torture.
As part of their case for deportation, Department of Homeland Security officials say Parlak failed to disclose details about his activities with PKK in his original application for asylum and left out information about his conviction in Turkey for his alleged role in the 1988 incident at the Syrian-Turkish border.
Parlak has denied any involvement in the killing of the two Turkish soldiers in 1988 and Carpenter has said his client has disavowed having any involvement with PKK. In court filings, Carpenter said Parlak was tortured while he served two years in a Turkish jail for his Kurdish separatist activities.
On Feb. 10, attorneys for the Department of Homeland Security filed an answer to Parlak's motion before the Board of Immigration Appeals asking that it not to reopen Parlak's case. The 27-page filing contained many of the same accusations against Parlak made in 2004, including that he failed to disclose details about PKK activities and the 1988 border skirmish in his application for asylum and a subsequent application for naturalization.
Homeland Security officials also dismissed claims made in Carpenter's motion to have Parlak's case reopened that conditions in Turkey have worsened and that Parlak is in danger if he is returned there.
"In effect, the respondent's evidence demonstrates that country conditions in Turkey largely remain unchanged since he was ordered removed eleven years ago," Jonathan Goulding, a senior attorney for the Department of Homeland Security, wrote. "... Notably, the government of Turkey has already prosecuted (Parlak) and released (Parlak). This seems to counter his asserted fear that the government of Turkey would take an interest in him today. And any fears he has of the PKK or right-wing groups can be mitigated by relocation to a safe part of Turkey."
Carpenter has said previously that Turkish newspapers have published reports about Parlak's possible return and the government's intent to punish him. He said the Feb. 8 letter to Upton and Schakowsky only serves to back those fears.
"These mistruths, and the use of the word 'extradition,' (are) evidence (of) the Turkish government's intent to arrest Parlak upon his arrival, and return him to the prison system in which he was tortured repeatedly," Carpenter said in a filing Thursday with Board of Immigration Appeals.
Carpenter points out that Parlak was ultimately convicted in Turkey in 2004 of being a separatist, but never convicted of murder or any other crimes in the 1988 border skirmish, as Acar asserts in his letter.
When the U.S. government first sought to deport Parlak in 2004, immigration officials asked Turkey to allow Parlak back into the country but Turkey had banned Parlak for his activities with the Kurds and withdrew his citizenship in 2002.
In 2010, the Department of Homeland Security granted Parlak a two-year deferral from deportation and deferrals followed each year after 2012.
Both Upton and now-retired U.S. Sen. Carl Levin have previously sponsored legislation that would have given Parlak permanent residency in the U.S. The introduction of the bills blocked actions to deport Parlak.
As March 22 looms, the Board of Immigration Appeals has not said yet whether it will reopen Parlak's case. Carpenter has requested a stay of deportation proceedings while the motion to reopen the case is pending.
Meanwhile, the number of Parlak's supporters is growing. The Chicago Tribune last week reported that Jeff Tweedy, frontman for the Chicago band Wilco, plans to perform a solo benefit concert for Parlak on Feb. 26 at the Acorn Theater in Three Oaks. Proceeds will go to pay for some of Parlak's legal fees, according to the report.
Parlak said he appreciates the work of his attorneys and support from his friends and is thankful "to have all this greatness around me."
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