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ANKARA: Turkey: Parliament to resume debates on controversial bill

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  • ANKARA: Turkey: Parliament to resume debates on controversial bill

    Turkey: Parliament to resume debates on controversial bill

    Monday, September 25, 2006
    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News


    Parliament will resume debates on Tuesday over a controversial bill on
    private schools that the opposition insists would allow the reopening of a
    Greek Orthodox seminary near Istanbul and violate provisions of the 1923
    Lausanne Treaty.
    Debates over the bill, part of a European Union-inspired reform package
    supported by the government, were put on ice last week after the government
    presented a last-minute proposal to change the definition of minority
    schools in the bill -- replacing the restricted description of minority as
    Greek, Armenian and Jewish with the more general one of non-Muslim -- and
    allow foreign students to attend them.
    The opposition blasted the proposal, saying it contradicts the definition
    of minorities provided in the Lausanne Treaty, one of the founding documents
    of the Republic of Turkey, and would pave the way for reopening of the
    Heybeliada, or Halki, Seminary on an island near Istanbul -- closed since
    1971.
    The CHP said the school was closed due to lack of students but that the
    bill would allow it to reopen since it would permit students from Greece and
    Greek Cyprus to attend it.
    The EU and the United States are asking Turkey to reopen the seminary, and
    the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate says it would help Turkey's Greek Orthodox
    minority to train new clerics.
    Parliament is expected to resume debates on the original version of the
    bill on Tuesday, since Industry and Trade Minister Ali Coskun announced last
    week that the government had decided to withdraw the proposal.
    On Wednesday Parliament is expected to go ahead with the reform package by
    holding debates on a law establishing an ombudsman. The law was earlier
    vetoed by President Ahmet Necdet Sezer.
    On Thursday it will debate a bill aimed at introducing new standards to
    improve productivity and quality in agricultural products.
    In the Justice Commission lawmakers will continue debates on a
    controversial bill on minority foundations, which CHP claims also violates
    the Lausanne Treaty. The Planning and Budget Commission will continue with
    debates on a bill on the Supreme Court of Public Accounts.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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