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Turkey Passes EU-Backed Law On Minority Schools, But Removes Key Pas

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  • Turkey Passes EU-Backed Law On Minority Schools, But Removes Key Pas

    TURKEY PASSES EU-BACKED LAW ON MINORITY SCHOOLS, BUT REMOVES KEY PASSAGE ALLOWING FOREIGNERS TO ATTEND

    International Herald Tribune, France
    The Associated Press
    Sept 26 2006

    ISTANBUL, Turkey Turkey's parliament on Tuesday passed an EU-backed
    reform bill broadening opportunities for minority schools, but removed
    a key passage that would have allowed foreign students to attend,
    a move likely to be seen as another setback in Turkey's progress
    toward EU membership.

    The deletion ended a heated debate for the moment about whether
    allowing foreign students to attend minority schools in Turkey could
    lead to the reopening of a Greek Orthodox theology school shut down
    35 years ago.

    Turkey has been resisting pressure from the EU to reopen the Halki
    Theological School on Heybeliada Island near Istanbul, which was
    closed to new students in 1971 under a law that put religious and
    military training under state control.

    The seminary trained generations of Greek Orthodox leaders including
    the current Patriarch Bartholomew I, a divisive figure in Turkey, which
    does not recognize his international role and rejects his use of the
    title "ecumenical," or universal, arguing instead that the patriarch is
    merely the spiritual leader of Istanbul's dwindling Orthodox community.

    The seminary remained open until 1985, when the last five students
    graduated.

    The passage of the altered bill will likely be seen as another setback
    in Turkey's progress toward EU membership. European officials have
    made wide-reaching reforms to improve minority rights in Turkey a
    prerequisite if this predominantly Muslim country is ever to join an
    expanded EU.

    Turkey's reluctance to concede to demands that it reopen the seminary
    stems from a deep mistrust many here feel toward the patriarchate
    because of its traditional ties with Greece, Turkey's historical
    regional rival.

    The refusal to recognize Bartholomew's international stature, likewise,
    is part of a desire to contain his influence to Istanbul instead
    of attributing to him the role of spiritual leader of hundreds of
    millions of Orthodox Christians worldwide.

    Ultra-nationalist lawyers say they have gained millions of signatures
    in Turkey demanding that the patriarch be moved to Greece.

    The head of Turkey's parliamentary commission on education, Tayyar
    Altikulac, said the wording of the adopted bill meant the seminary
    would remain closed unless the government decided to amend the
    constitution to reopen it.

    "This bill has nothing to do with the theological seminary. The opening
    of the theological seminary is a constitutional matter," he said.

    The adopted bill defines minority schools as "pre-schools, elementary
    and secondary schools founded by Greek, Armenian and Jewish minorities"
    and specifies that they must be attended by "students originating
    from the Turkish Republic."

    The deleted wording had included "foreign students who belong to
    these minorities."

    After the theological seminary closed, the Patriarchate tried to
    train future leaders of the church by sending them to theological
    schools abroad after they finished high school in Turkey. But most
    never returned, something church officials complain starves them of
    possible new leaders.

    Under a 1923 treaty with Greece, the ecumenical patriarch must be a
    Turkish citizen. That was the condition set by Turkey for allowing
    the Patriarchate to remain in Istanbul.

    The patriarchate in Istanbul dates from the 1,100-year-old Orthodox
    Greek Byzantine Empire, which collapsed when Muslim Ottoman Turks
    conquered Constantinople, today's Istanbul, in 1453.

    In a related development, parliament's justice commission on Tuesday
    was also debating wording of a separate draft law aimed at returning
    properties of religious minority foundations confiscated by the state
    since 1974.

    The planned amendments would allow the foundations to acquire and
    register properties that have been donated to them, but it was not
    clear if they would allow the groups to reclaim property that has
    since been sold to other people.

    Although the proposed amendments are hailed as a breakthrough, they
    still fall short of expectations of minorities since they do not cover
    the issue of some other confiscated properties, such as cemeteries
    or properties owned by minority schools which are not foundations,
    Murat Cano, a lawyer and an expert on minority rights, told private
    Haber Turk television channel on Tuesday.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the Islamic-rooted government
    on Tuesday insisted that steps be taken by Greece in granting more
    "rights to Muslims living in Greece" before Turkey would take any
    further steps.

    Members of Turkey's small Armenian and Greek minorities criticized
    the government's stance, saying they were being treated as "hostages"
    and not "citizens," Haber Turk reported.

    ISTANBUL, Turkey Turkey's parliament on Tuesday passed an EU-backed
    reform bill broadening opportunities for minority schools, but removed
    a key passage that would have allowed foreign students to attend,
    a move likely to be seen as another setback in Turkey's progress
    toward EU membership.

    The deletion ended a heated debate for the moment about whether
    allowing foreign students to attend minority schools in Turkey could
    lead to the reopening of a Greek Orthodox theology school shut down
    35 years ago.

    Turkey has been resisting pressure from the EU to reopen the Halki
    Theological School on Heybeliada Island near Istanbul, which was
    closed to new students in 1971 under a law that put religious and
    military training under state control.

    The seminary trained generations of Greek Orthodox leaders including
    the current Patriarch Bartholomew I, a divisive figure in Turkey, which
    does not recognize his international role and rejects his use of the
    title "ecumenical," or universal, arguing instead that the patriarch is
    merely the spiritual leader of Istanbul's dwindling Orthodox community.

    The seminary remained open until 1985, when the last five students
    graduated.

    The passage of the altered bill will likely be seen as another setback
    in Turkey's progress toward EU membership. European officials have
    made wide-reaching reforms to improve minority rights in Turkey a
    prerequisite if this predominantly Muslim country is ever to join an
    expanded EU.

    Turkey's reluctance to concede to demands that it reopen the seminary
    stems from a deep mistrust many here feel toward the patriarchate
    because of its traditional ties with Greece, Turkey's historical
    regional rival.

    The refusal to recognize Bartholomew's international stature, likewise,
    is part of a desire to contain his influence to Istanbul instead
    of attributing to him the role of spiritual leader of hundreds of
    millions of Orthodox Christians worldwide.

    Ultra-nationalist lawyers say they have gained millions of signatures
    in Turkey demanding that the patriarch be moved to Greece.

    The head of Turkey's parliamentary commission on education, Tayyar
    Altikulac, said the wording of the adopted bill meant the seminary
    would remain closed unless the government decided to amend the
    constitution to reopen it.

    "This bill has nothing to do with the theological seminary. The opening
    of the theological seminary is a constitutional matter," he said.

    The adopted bill defines minority schools as "pre-schools, elementary
    and secondary schools founded by Greek, Armenian and Jewish minorities"
    and specifies that they must be attended by "students originating
    from the Turkish Republic."

    The deleted wording had included "foreign students who belong to
    these minorities."

    After the theological seminary closed, the Patriarchate tried to
    train future leaders of the church by sending them to theological
    schools abroad after they finished high school in Turkey. But most
    never returned, something church officials complain starves them of
    possible new leaders.

    Under a 1923 treaty with Greece, the ecumenical patriarch must be a
    Turkish citizen. That was the condition set by Turkey for allowing
    the Patriarchate to remain in Istanbul.

    The patriarchate in Istanbul dates from the 1,100-year-old Orthodox
    Greek Byzantine Empire, which collapsed when Muslim Ottoman Turks
    conquered Constantinople, today's Istanbul, in 1453.

    In a related development, parliament's justice commission on Tuesday
    was also debating wording of a separate draft law aimed at returning
    properties of religious minority foundations confiscated by the state
    since 1974.

    The planned amendments would allow the foundations to acquire and
    register properties that have been donated to them, but it was not
    clear if they would allow the groups to reclaim property that has
    since been sold to other people.

    Although the proposed amendments are hailed as a breakthrough, they
    still fall short of expectations of minorities since they do not cover
    the issue of some other confiscated properties, such as cemeteries
    or properties owned by minority schools which are not foundations,
    Murat Cano, a lawyer and an expert on minority rights, told private
    Haber Turk television channel on Tuesday.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the Islamic-rooted government
    on Tuesday insisted that steps be taken by Greece in granting more
    "rights to Muslims living in Greece" before Turkey would take any
    further steps.

    Members of Turkey's small Armenian and Greek minorities criticized
    the government's stance, saying they were being treated as "hostages"
    and not "citizens," Haber Turk reported.
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