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Turkey ruling helps Christians and Jews

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  • Turkey ruling helps Christians and Jews

    Religious Intelligence Ltd, UK
    Feb. 22, 2008


    Turkey ruling helps Christians and Jews
    Friday, 22nd February 2008. 4:01pm

    By: George Conger.

    TURKEY'S parliament has approved a law permitting Christian and
    Jewish foundations to reclaim property seized by the state.

    The proposed law will allow religious minorities to redeem a portion
    of the £75 billion in property seized by the state in the wake of
    political disturbances following the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus,
    and meets some of the conditions set by the EU for Turkish membership
    in the organization.

    The law also will permit Muslim groups to receive financial support
    >From overseas groups.

    Nationalists denounced the vote as an affront to Turkish sovereignty,
    while secularists fear the lifting of the ban on foreign money will
    strengthen the growing Islamist movement in Turkey, with activists
    now able to draw upon financial support from Saudi Arabia to further
    their political ambitions.

    The Feb 20 vote passed Parliament by a vote of 242-72 and is expected
    to be signed into law by President Abdullah Gül, a political ally of
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Islamist-leaning AKP
    party.

    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn applauded the move saying `the
    adoption of the new law on foundations is a welcome step forward.'

    `This is an important issue for Turkey, and one that all EU
    institutions have regularly highlighted as important to ensure
    fundamental rights and freedoms for all Turkish citizens,' he said.

    However, Rehn said, "It is implementation that will be the test of
    Turkey's progress in ensuring rights and freedoms."

    A similar law was passed by Parliament in November 2006, but was
    vetoed by the secularist president Ahmet Necdet Sezer.

    An Istanbul think tank, the Turkish Economic and Social Studies
    Foundation, (TESEV) noted Turkey's entry into the EU would likely be
    blocked if it did `not ensure the return or indemnification of the
    seized assets of non-Muslim foundations.'

    However TESEV's analysis of the bill said it failed to address a host
    of problems, including the issue of restitution, especially for a
    number of properties that have been re-sold to a third party
    following government expropriation. It also entrenches the legal
    disabilities of non-Muslims under Turkish law, it concluded.

    "The present text of the draft is not acceptable because it violates
    the fundamental rights and liberties of non-Muslim citizens which are
    guaranteed under the Turkish constitution, the European Convention on
    Human Rights and the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne," TESEV stated.

    The bill also calls for the government to consider the `the
    international principle of reciprocity' before returning Church
    lands, a reference to Turkish demands that the Greek government
    liberalize its treatment of its Turkish minority.

    A spokesman for the Armenian Patriarchate said that Church was uneasy
    with the proposed law. `We are ethnic Armenians, but we are Turkish
    citizens, we are not foreigners. So, applying the principle of
    reciprocity to us would amount to discrimination,' he said.

    In 1974, the Turkish Supreme Court of Appeals (Yargitay) ruled that
    religious foundations cannot acquire property, unless this
    possibility is specifically mentioned in the declarations they were
    obliged to submit to the government in 1936.

    Properties acquired by Christian Churches and Jewish organizations
    after 1936, either through purchase or through donation, were
    expropriated by the state. The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR)
    in 2007 adjudicated a case brought by an Istanbul Greek Orthodox
    school in 1996, whose property---acquired in 1952---had been
    nationalized by the state.

    The ECHR ruled Turkey's treatment of its Christian and Jewish
    minorities' property rights Article 1 of Additional Protocol 1 of the
    European Convention On Human Rights (protection of property), and
    called upon Turkey either to return the property to its legitimate
    owners or pay damages. The Turkish government has so far not complied
    as it is not bound by rulings of the ECHR.
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