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Turkey: Law Passed To Allow Churches Reclaim Land

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  • Turkey: Law Passed To Allow Churches Reclaim Land

    LAW PASSED TO ALLOW CHURCHES RECLAIM LAND

    The Irish Times
    November 15, 2006 Wednesday

    TURKEY: Charitable foundations can apply for restitution of property,
    writes Nicholas Birch in Istanbul

    The reasons courts gave for confiscating eight properties belonging to
    an Istanbul Armenian church between 1987 and 1993 were always the same.

    According to the deeds, the buildings belonged to St John and the
    Archangel Gabriel. But who were these people? Judges sent inspectors
    out to find them, but they came back empty-handed.

    Now a new EU-backed law on charitable foundations is due to set the
    record straight. Passed last Thursday by parliament and awaiting
    presidential approval, the legislation gives foundations 18 months
    to apply for the restitution of state-confiscated property. It also
    foresees the appointment of a non-Muslim member to the state department
    that oversees foundations.

    "These are positive steps towards wiping out the effects of 1974,"
    says Diran Bakar, a Turkish-Armenian lawyer, referring to a Turkish
    Appeal Court decision to cancel real estate acquisitions made by
    non-Muslim foundations since 1936. Coinciding with war on Cyprus,
    the ruling led to the confiscation of at least 4,000 properties
    belonging to Turkish Greeks, Jews and Armenians.

    "Its aim was to dry up the minority communities' economic resources,"
    explains political scientist Elcin Macar, who believes that the
    "founding philosophy of the Turkish Republic never had any space
    for non-Muslims".

    Brussels has long-warned discrimination will have to stop if Turkey's
    EU bid is to succeed.

    In its annual report on Turkey released last Wednesday, it criticised
    Ankara for ongoing limitations to religious freedom, and recommended
    the adoption of minority legislation in line with European Court of
    Human Rights case law.

    Yet, despite it providing the impulse behind the new law, few expect
    Brussels to be satisfied with the end result. The law not only fails
    to provide compensation for foundations whose confiscated property
    has been sold on by the state, analysts point out, it also maintains
    the distinction between Muslim and non-Muslim foundations.

    "This is my country, I see my future here," says Lakis Vingas,
    businessman and member of Turkey's 3,000-strong Greek community. "Yet
    when I turn on the TV, it's immediately clear that I'm seen as a
    foreigner." He is referring to the furious rows that surrounded
    parliament's discussion of the foundation bill.

    Some deputies insisted the legislation would enable the Greek Orthodox
    Patriarch - a parish priest for Ankara, first among equals for the
    world's Orthodox church - to build an Orthodox Vatican in central
    Istanbul. Others worried it would involve handing Istanbul's famed Agia
    Sophia - once a church, then a mosque, now a museum - over to Greece.

    In the case of opposition deputy Bayram Meral, prejudice took a less
    whimsical form. "What's this law about? It's about giving Agop his
    property back," he railed, using a common Armenian name.

    "Congratulations to the government! You ignore the villagers, the
    workers and the farmers to worry yourself with Agop's business."

    Baskin Oran, an expert on Turkish minorities, thinks such sentiments
    are worryingly representative of an increasingly nationalistic
    parliament. "Not only will this law not satisfy Europe, it's highly
    likely to damage relations further, as just another example of the
    half-hearted reform process Turkey was criticised for in the report."
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