Last week, Aksaray businesses and residents received a notice ordering them to declutter building facades and overhaul their signage. The order represents the latest salvo in an eight-year effort to standardize storefronts and require all signs to be in the Turkish language, which uses the Latin alphabet. It also seeks the removal of signs in Cyrillic lettering and all signs with neon and LED lights.
Some Syrian residents are vowing to ignore the order, seeing it as an assault on their culture. Turkey today is home to 3 million refugees, mostly Syrian.
…“This is not a project that we planned today,” Fatih spokeswoman Nurcan Albayrak said in an email to The Associated Press. She said Fatih was part of a historic peninsula that required “aesthetic consistency” and described the spread of ornately lit and non-Turkish signs as part of a wider problem of “visual pollution.”
Arabic signs face removal threat in Istanbul’s Little Syria – The Washington Post
“Visual Pollution.”
Oy…..