Sevan Nişanyan declared ‘persona non grata’ in Greece

3 comments
  1. **Sevan Nişanyan declared ‘persona non grata’ in Greece**

    *Writer Sevan Nişanyan, who escaped from the prison he stayed in Turkey four years ago and went to Greece, declared that he was declared “persona non grata” in this country.*

    Sevan Nişanyan, who learned that he was declared an ‘undesirable person’ in Greece while trying to return to Samos Island, where he lived in Greece, via Belgrade, after his trip abroad, explained the developments on his Youtube broadcast.

    Nişanyan, who has been sharing on social media for two years and broadcasting on Youtube under the name of “Sunday Talks” every Sunday, said in a statement from Belgrade that the Greek authorities made a “state secret” about why he was declared persona non grata.

    Stating that this reaction may be due to pressure from Turkey, Nişanyan also expressed that they may have been disturbed by the fact that the authorities in Greece added Northern Greece to the study of place names in recent years.

    **’GREEK STATE HAS THIS FEELING OF “WHAT IS HE DOING?”‘**

    Nişanyan expressed his views on Greece’s decision in his YouTube broadcast from Belgrade:

    “After dealing with place names in Turkey for about 10 years, I felt the need to deal with neighboring countries as well. Last year, [I felt the need to map] the place names of Northern Greece and Bulgaria, a very large part of these place names are in Turkish. Half of the place names in Northern Greece are Bulgarian and half are Turkish. Greek is almost nonexistent. I felt the need to map them too. For states, it’s like invading their privacy. I think that has an effect. The Greek state was strongly caught up in the feeling of ‘what are they doing’ because all the bureaucrats of the world are brothers.”

    **’ROADS OF EXILE [FOR ME] AGAIN’**

    Sevan Nişanyan, in a post he made later, said, “Nişanyan: The roads of exile appeared again…”.

  2. lmao. that reminds me germany or france or whatever giving refugee to a russian political activist. he was applauded for his actions when he was doing them in russia but as soon as he started doing them in europe he was kicked out as well.

  3. “After dealing with place names in Turkey for about 10 years, I felt the need to deal with neighboring countries as well. Last year, [I felt the need to map] the place names of Northern Greece and Bulgaria, a very large part of these place names are in Turkish. Half of the place names in Northern Greece are Bulgarian and half are Turkish. Greek is almost nonexistent. I felt the need to map them too. For states, it’s like invading their privacy. I think that has an effect. The Greek state was strongly caught up in the feeling of ‘what are they doing’ because all the bureaucrats of the world are brothers.”

    He seems like pushed on greek insecurities lol

Leave a Reply