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Turkey: A Controversial Report On Minority Rights

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  • Turkey: A Controversial Report On Minority Rights

    Turkey: A controversial report on minority rights

    Monday Morning, Lebanon
    Nov 8 2004

    Debate over a report criticizing breaches of minority rights in
    aspiring European Union member Turkey turned ugly last week when
    members of a government-sponsored human rights group that issued the
    document clashed in public.

    The incident was the latest episode in a row within the Human Rights
    Advisory Board, a body attached to the office of Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, which highlighted widespread hostility in Turkey to
    advanced cultural freedoms for the country's Kurdish and non-Muslim
    communities.

    Nationalist members of the board, which is comprised of government
    officials, academics and civic groups, sabotaged a news conference
    called to formally release the report, which makes some controversial
    recommendations to the government and excerpts of which were earlier
    leaked to the media.

    Shortly after the head of the board, Ibrahim Kaboglu, had started
    to speak, a nationalist unionist grabbed the papers from his hands
    and tore them to pieces, yelling: "This report is a fabrication and
    should be torn up!"

    Kaboglu was forced to leave the hall, saying: "We can't even hold a
    news conference. This is the state of freedom of thought in Turkey".
    The EU, which Turkey is seeking to join, has long pressed Ankara to
    grant equal cultural freedoms to its sizeable Kurdish minority as
    well as smaller, non-Muslim communities such as Greeks, Armenians and
    Jews. The document maintains that Turkey's understanding of minority
    rights had fallen behind universal norms and proposes far-reaching
    amendments to the constitution and related laws, atop reforms that
    Turkey had already undertaken as part of its EU membership bid.
    The report describes as "paranoia" widespread concerns that equal
    cultural rights for minorities could lead to the country's breakup,
    fuelled by a bloody Kurdish rebellion in the Southeast in the 1980s
    and 1990s.

    "There is no doubt that a more humane treatment by the state of its
    own people will be much more helpful for the country's unity... The
    citizens the state should fear the least are the ones whom it has
    granted their rights", it says.

    The report also underlines that for decades Turkey had breached its
    founding instrument, the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, which envisages
    the free use by all Turkish citizens of any language in commercial
    activities, meetings and in the press.

    It maintains that non-Muslims in particular are subject to
    discrimination and are sometimes treated as foreigners rather than
    equal Turkish citizens.

    Critics last week blasted the report as "a document of treason" and
    asked an Ankara court to launch legal proceedings against its authors.
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