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  • Erdogan Meets With Religious Minorities

    ERDOGAN MEETS WITH RELIGIOUS MINORITIES

    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08/17/erdo gan-meets-with-religious-minorities/
    Aug 17th, 2009

    ISTANBUL (Combined Sources)-Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    promised democratic reforms on Saturday in a rare meeting with Turkey's
    religious minority leaders, highlighting the issue of minority rights.

    Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew and leaders of the small Armenian,
    Jewish, Assyrian Orthodox and Catholic communities had lunch with
    Erdogan and senior ministers on Buyukada, an island near mainland
    Istanbul.

    Representative of the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul, Archbishop
    Aram Atechian was present at the meeting along with Holy Savior
    Hospital board chairman Bedros Shirinoglu, Knale town council
    president Levon Shadian, Kumkabu town council president Hrand
    Moskovian, Ortagyugh town council president Iskender Shingeuz,
    "Karageuzian" organization president Dikran Gulmezgil, Armenia's
    Black Sea representative Karen Mirzoyan and representatives of the
    three Armenian newspapers, Marmara, Agos and Jamanak.

    The lunch meeting coincided with government reform moves to address
    decades-old tensions with the country's 12 million Kurds. Erdogan, a
    devout Muslim whose government is viewed with suspicion by some for its
    Islamist roots, alluded in his speech to a broader reform process. Only
    reporters from the Anatolia news agency and the state-run Turkish
    Radio and Television Corporation were allowed to attend the meeting.

    Turkey is passing through a transition period, Erdogan said in a
    speech delivered at the lunch, while admitting that problems have
    been experienced during this process along which the government has
    been exerting efforts for further democratization of the country,
    Anatolia reported.

    The government is against both ethnic and religious nationalism, he
    said, underlining that they have kept an equal distance from every
    ethic and religious group in society. "Aren't there deficiencies
    regarding implementation? Yes, there are. We will overcome these
    [deficiencies] with a struggle to be carried out all together, and I
    believe that this democratic initiative will change a lot of things in
    our country. Only if we stand hand in hand and shoulder to shoulder,"
    Erdogan was quoted as saying by Anatolia. "Persians have a saying,
    'They gathered, talked and dispersed.' We should not be of those who
    gather, talk and disperse. A result should come out of this."

    Erdogan and Bartholomew later toured the Aya Yorgi Church, where
    they had a private conversation in which the patriarch voiced his
    community's concerns, a patriarchate official told Reuters on condition
    of anonymity. The two men last met in 2006.

    Erdogan and Bartholomew also visited a former orphanage on Buyukada
    that the Turkish state seized from a Greek Orthodox foundation a
    decade ago. The European Court of Human Rights ruled last year that
    Turkey had wrongly confiscated the property, but the government has
    yet to act on that ruling.

    Bartholomew also raised the issue of the closed Orthodox seminary on
    the nearby island of Heybeliada, or Halki in Greek, but Erdogan made
    no statement on the issue, the patriarchate official said.

    "We believe the prime minister is looking for a way to open the
    school. There is movement on this," the official said. "It was a very
    positive, very friendly meeting."

    In remarks to the Athens News Agency, Bartholomew voiced pleasure over
    the meeting with Erdogan, the private CNN-Turk news channel reported.

    "We have been inspired with hope; we are optimistic," the patriarch
    was quoted as saying by CNN-Turk, which also reported that Greek
    media labeled the meeting "historical" and "a big step."

    Greek news reports also said that the Greek Foreign Ministry described
    the visit as "positive and extremely interesting," citing anonymous
    sources.

    Turkey signaled last month that the seminary may open after pressure
    from the EU and US President Barack Obama, who called for its
    restoration during a visit to Turkey in April.

    The EU has made reopening Halki Seminary a litmus test of the
    government's commitment to religious freedom for non-Muslims. Turkey
    closed Halki Seminary in 1971 during a period of tension with Greece
    over Cyprus and a crackdown on religious education that also included
    Islamist schools. About 2,500 Greeks remain in Turkey, as well as
    approximately 60,000 Armenians, 20,000 Jews and 10,000 Assyrians.
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