Alper Yilmaz has no doubt where his home is. "My homeland is Austria, Vienna," he says. But with a far-right party sharing power and anti-immigration sentiment on the rise, Yilmaz –along with thousands of other Austrians with Turkish roots – is worried he could be stripped of his citizenship. Except in special cases, Austria does not allow its citizens to hold dual nationality. But the far-right and anti-Islam Freedom Party – junior partner in a ruling coalition with the centre-right Austrian People's Party – last year claimed to have received a list of Turkish voters which it said could contain tens of thousands of illegal dual nationals. The affair drew comparisons to Britain's Windrush scandal, in which scores of British citizens of Caribbean origin were deported or detained because they had not collected the necessary paperwork proving their right be there. Now many of the Austrians of Turkish origin whose names appear on the list could face a similar administrative nightmare. Nationwide, 85 people have already had their citizenship revoked. City authorities in the capital, Vienna, say they hired 26 extra members of staff to investigate 18,000 potential cases. Duygu Ozkan, a journalist for the <em>Die Presse</em> newspaper, said the dual nationality issue had become "virtually the only topic of conversation" for Austria's Turkish community. Austria, like neighbouring Germany, invited thousands of Turkish citizens to come and work in the 1960s and 1970s, with many staying and putting down roots. Turkish immigrants and their descendants now number about 270,000 in a population of 8.7 million. One of them is Cigdem Schiller, born in Austria 31 years ago to Turkish parents. Ms Schiller – who handed in her Turkish passport to become an Austrian citizen when she was a teenager in 2003 – said that because of her presence on the list, she received a letter from the authorities in February asking her to prove she does not hold dual nationality. After many visits to the Turkish consulate in the city of Salzburg where she lives, she says she eventually managed to do so. But the process was not easy and she argues that her case proves the list is unreliable. Others have found themselves trapped in a similarly Kafkaesque situation. Earlier this year, the Salzburg authorities stripped a Turkish man on the list of his Austrian citizenship, a decision subsequently upheld by a court, which argued that the list – whose origin the Freedom Party has never revealed – could only have been produced by a bona fide Turkish authority. The man's lawyer, Peter Weidisch, said his client found himself in the "extremely difficult situation of being asked to prove that he hadn't done something". To make matters worse, the Turkish authorities also washed their hands of him. Mr Weidisch said his client was told "you are an Austrian citizen, we can't help you". Mr Yilmaz, who runs a cafe in Vienna, has no idea how his name ended up on the list. Born in Turkey, the 53-year-old came to Austria in the early 1980s and adopted Austrian citizenship in 1988. He says he has had no official contact with Turkey since. Mr Yilmaz said the Turkish consulate in Vienna suggested he go back to Turkey to pursue his case. But he is reluctant to go as he believes his status as an Alevi Kurd, and his opposition to the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, could put him in danger. The cafe owner feels he has been caught up in political manoeuvrings outside his control. On the one hand, Mr Erdogan is keen to keep Turkish communities in Europe closely tied to the motherland, not least because they count among his most loyal supporters. According to Austrian media reports, some Turkish consular officials are reluctant to help Turks give up their nationality. <strong>_______________</strong> <strong>Read more: <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/world/europe/austria-enrages-turkey-with-plan-to-shut-7-mosques-1.738082">Austria enrages Turkey with plan to shut 7 mosques</a></strong> <strong>_______________</strong> On the other hand, there is the anti-Turkish and Islamophobic rhetoric spouted by the far-right Freedom Party. Only last week the party posted a video about health insurance fraud that featured two fez-wearing cartoon criminals called Mustafa and Ali. It deleted the video after criticism. Mr Yilmaz says he has no political axe to grind with any party, but simply wants the government to come up with a fair solution. "I am afraid, I have sleepless nights thinking: What happens now?" he says.