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Turkey Parl. approves return of confiscated property to minorities

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  • Turkey Parl. approves return of confiscated property to minorities

    International Herald Tribune, France -
    Feb 20 2008


    Turkey's parliament approves return of confiscated property to
    minorities
    The Associated PressPublished: February 20, 2008


    ANKARA, Turkey: Turkey's parliament approved a law Wednesday to
    return properties confiscated by the state to Christian and Jewish
    minority foundations - a key reform demanded by the European Union.

    The EU has long been pressing Turkey to pass the measure that would
    allow the foundations belonging to minority groups to reclaim seized
    assets - including churches, school buildings and orphanages - that
    were registered in the names of saints.

    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn hailed Turkey for adopting the
    law.

    "The adoption of the new law on foundations is a welcome step
    forward," he said. "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."

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

    The law would also allow Muslim foundations to receive financial aid
    >From foreign countries.

    The reform appears designed to meet conditions set by the EU for
    Turkey's membership in the bloc.

    Parliament passed the measure 242-72. President Abdullah Gul, a close
    associate of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is expected to sign
    the measure.

    Turkey seized some properties owned by minority foundations in 1974
    around the time of an invasion of Cyprus that followed a coup attempt
    by supporters of union with Greece.

    The country's population of 70 million, mostly Muslim, includes
    65,000 Armenian Orthodox Christians, 23,000 Jews and fewer than 2,500
    Greek Orthodox Christians.

    Parliament first approved the measure in November 2006. But the
    president at the time, Ahmet Necdet Sezer, was a secularist who was
    often at odds with Erdogan's Islamic-rooted government, and he vetoed
    it.

    Critics have said, however, that the measure makes no clear provision
    for assets that have since been sold on to other people.

    Religious minorities have often complained of discrimination in
    Turkey, which has a history of conflict with Greece, which is
    predominantly Christian, and with Armenians, another mostly Christian
    group.

    Many Armenians accuse Turkey of genocide early in the last century,
    but Turkey says mass killings at that time were the result of the
    chaos of war, rather than a systematic campaign of genocide.
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