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ANKARA: 'All Foundations Need To Be Equal'

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  • ANKARA: 'All Foundations Need To Be Equal'

    'ALL FOUNDATIONS NEED TO BE EQUAL'

    Hurriyet
    March 16 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - A think-tank releases a report that says minority
    foundations should be granted equal rights or Turkey will end up
    paying lots of compensation in regard to cases taken to the European
    Court of Human Rights. The report examined cases of property seizure
    by the state

    Minority foundations in Turkey should enjoy the same rights as the rest
    of the countries organizations, according to a report released Saturday
    by the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation, or TESEV.

    Proposing solutions to minority foundations' property problems,
    TESEV requested the proposals be followed, and warned that otherwise,
    Turkey would have to pay more compensation in cases that would be
    brought to the European Court of Human Rights, or ECHR.

    "History and legal procedures show that the state has a policy that
    wants non-Muslims to leave Turkey and leave their property and goods
    behind," Etyen Mahcupyan, director of TESEV Democratization Program and
    a columnist at daily Taraf, said at a panel Saturday. Mahcupyan said
    the difficulties minority foundations are facing today and incidents
    like the wealth tax introduced in 1942 and the state's seizure of
    minorities' properties lead to more perceptions supporting that view.

    TESEV's report, "The Story of an Alien(ation): Real Estate Ownership
    Problems of Non-Muslim Foundations and Communities in Turkey,"
    examined the history and legal procedures of how some foundations'
    properties were seized by the state.

    The report revealed that minority foundations faced many problems,
    mainly the inability to purchase any new property or open new
    foundations. Although the law enables minority foundations to reclaim
    their confiscated property from the state, a jurist from TESEV,
    Dilek Kurban, said, "It fails to address a number of problems, such
    as the taking back of some properties that have been re-sold to a
    third party after government expropriation."

    In 1936, a declaration was sent to all minority foundations asking
    them to report their properties. Later, the properties that were not
    declared were confiscated by the state. This declaration should no
    longer be a basis for the current status of the minority foundations,
    experts said.

    "Those foundations did not say in the declaration that they might have
    additional properties in the future through inheritance or donations,"
    said Kezban Hatemi, a lawyer. Minority foundations cannot have new
    properties, she said. "According to a recent law numbered 5737, they
    cannot even start new foundations or build an orphanage or hospital
    in a certain community."

    The Lausanne Treaty, which is seen as a significant document and first
    gave broad rights to minorities, is misinterpreted in some ways, said
    experts. The Lausanne Treaty defined who is considered a minority in
    Turkey. "The treaty defines minorities, but minorities other than
    the Greek, Armenian and Jewish communities, such as Catholics and
    Assyrian Catholics, could not benefit from that treaty and faced
    problems owning property and establishing foundations," said Hatemi.

    In order to solve all these problems, a law better than 5737 should
    be introduced, read the report. That will also pave the way to
    solve the problems in domestic jurisdiction without making Turkey
    pay compensation in cases that go to the ECHR. The properties that
    are confiscated by the state should be given back to the communities
    and non-Muslim as well as Muslim communities should be allowed to open
    foundations for their communities, advised the report. The reciprocity
    principle cannot be viewed in the case of minority foundations because
    there is no addressee in cases of Armenian and Jewish communities,
    according to experts.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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