The Hatay reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Hatay

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Hatay is a province of southern Turkey, situated between the Mediterranean Sea to the west and Syria to the south and east.

Its capital is Antakya, formerly Antioch. Biblical Alexandretta is also located within the province, but is now known by its Turkish name, Iskenderun. The province has an area of 5,545 km² (2,141 mi²) and a population of 1,002,252 in the 1990 census.

Hatay was originally the sanjak (or governorate) of Alexandretta, part of the Ottoman Empire. Following the empire's demise after World War I, it became part of the French mandate of Syria. The area was a multi-ethnic melting pot of Turks, Arabs, Maronites, Armenians, Jews, and Greeks.

In 1936, it became the subject of a complaint to the League of Nations by the Turkish government under Mustafa Kemal Ataturk concerning alleged mistreatment of the area's Turkish populations. Ataturk demanded that it become part of Turkey, claiming that the plurality of its citizens were Turkish. The sanjak was given autonomy in 1937 in an arrangement brokered by the League. However, in 1938 rioting broke out between Turks and Arabs, prompting the creation of a temporary "Republic of Hatay" for one year under joint French and Turkish military control. In 1939, a plebiscite resulted in a vote for unification with Turkey, following which the former sanjak became a Turkish province. France's willingness to accede to Turkish demands was at least partly influenced by its government's wariness of getting involved in a potential overseas conflict while Germany posed a clear military threat on its immediate borders.

Syria does not recognize the incorporation of Hatay within Turkey and the issue has been a source of some tension between the two countries.