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Turkish parliament adopts EU-required law on non-Muslim properties

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  • Turkish parliament adopts EU-required law on non-Muslim properties

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 20, 2008 Wednesday 5:51 PM GMT


    Turkish parliament adopts EU-required law on non-Muslim properties

    ANKARA, Feb 20 2008


    Turkish lawmakers on Wednesday adopted for a second time a bill to
    improve the rights of Turkey's tiny Christian and Jewish communities,
    a key demand of the European Union that Ankara is seeking to join.

    The legislation, which had been vetoed by former president Ahmet
    Necdet Sezer in November 2006, garnered 'yes' votes from 242
    lawmakers in the 550-seat house which is dominated by the ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AKP), deputy parliament speaker Meral
    Aksener announced.

    The bill, an overhaul of the Foundations Law, paves the way for
    mainly Greek, Armenian and Jewish foundations to recover some of the
    properties seized by the state since 1974.

    However, community representatives have criticised the bill for
    failing to provide for the return of or compensation for properties
    that the state has since sold to third parties.

    They have also denounced a provision that limits the period for
    applications for the return of properties to 18 months.

    The legislation also loosens the tight state control over all
    foundations and broadens their rights on property and administration.

    It allows foundations to operate abroad, receive foreign funds and
    set up or become a partner in a company to generate revenues.

    The bill, which now needs the president's approval to come into
    force, faced harsh objections from opposition parties on the grounds
    that it amounted to compromising Turkey's interests under EU
    pressure.

    Non-Muslims in Turkey are mostly Greeks and Armenians, often viewed
    with suspicion because of deep mistrust towards Greece, a historical
    rival, and Armenia, which accuses Ottoman Turks of having committed
    genocide against its ancestors during World War I.
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