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ANKARA: Council Of Europe Report Slams Greece, Turkey Over Treatment

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  • ANKARA: Council Of Europe Report Slams Greece, Turkey Over Treatment

    Today's Zaman
    28 January 2010, Thursday

    A top European human rights watchdog's report on problems encountered
    by non-Muslim minorities in Turkey and the Muslim Turkish minority
    in Greece will be finalized today after being debated at PACE, and
    is expected to level heavy criticism at both Greece and Turkey. A
    top European human rights watchdog has started debating a report on
    the problems encountered by non-Muslim minorities in Turkey as well
    as by the Muslim Turkish minority in Greece.

    The draft report, to be finalized after being debated at the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) late on
    Wednesday, slams both Turkey and Greece for not fulfilling the demands
    of religious minorities in their respective countries. The assembly,
    under the chairmanship of Turkish deputy Mevlut CavuÅ~_oglu, who
    was elected as its new president on Monday, will review the report
    and approve its final draft after a number of challenges raised by
    deputies were addressed on the floor.

    The report, titled "Freedom of religion and other human rights for
    non-Muslim minorities in Turkey and for the Muslim minority in Thrace
    [Eastern Greece]," was written by Michel Hunault, a French deputy
    from the European Democrat Group (EDG) for the Committee on Legal
    Affairs and Human Rights. In a nutshell, Hunault suggested to the
    Council of Europe that "Greece and Turkey should have all their
    citizens belonging to religious minorities treated in accordance
    with the provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights,
    rather than rely on the 'reciprocity' principle stated by the 1923
    Treaty of Lausanne to withhold the application of certain rights."

    Turkey and Greece blame each other for not fulfilling the terms of
    the Treaty of Lausanne and both decline to provide broader rights
    and freedoms to minority groups based on the narrow definition in
    the 1923 treaty. The "reciprocity" clause is often invoked when one
    of these issues emerges in bilateral relations.

    The PACE report asserts, however, that the two countries should take
    care of all of their citizens without discrimination, regardless of the
    way in which the neighboring state may treat its own citizens. The
    report argued that the recurrent invoking of the principle of
    reciprocity by Greece and Turkey as a basis for refusing to implement
    the rights secured for minorities in the Treaty of Lausanne is
    "anachronistic" and could jeopardize each country's national cohesion.

    A top European human rights watchdog's report on problems encountered
    by non-Muslim minorities in Turkey and the Muslim Turkish minority
    in Greece will be finalized today after being debated at PACE, and
    is expected to level heavy criticism at both Greece and Turkey.

    It urged the two countries "to take measures for the members of
    the religious minorities -- particularly as regards education and
    the right to own property -- and to ensure that the members of these
    minorities are no longer perceived as foreigners in their own country"
    while encouraging them to sign and/or ratify the Framework Convention
    for the Protection of National Minorities and the European Charter
    for Regional or Minority Languages.

    Report faults Turkey on a number of areas

    PACE urges Turkey to recognize the legal personality of the Greek
    Orthodox Patriarchate of Ä°stanbul, the Armenian Patriarchate of
    Ä°stanbul, the Armenian Catholic Archbishopric of Ä°stanbul, the
    Bulgarian Orthodox Exarchate, the Chief Rabbinate and the Vicariate
    Apostolic of Ä°stanbul, saying, "The absence of legal personality
    which affects all the communities concerned having direct effects in
    terms of ownership rights and property management." It specifically
    asks for constructive solutions concerning the training of religious
    minorities' clergy and the granting of work permits for foreign
    members of the clergy in Turkey.

    As for the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Ä°stanbul in particular,
    PACE claims that Turkey needs to give the patriarchate the freedom
    to choose to use the adjective "ecumenical." It further argues that a
    resolution should be reached with representatives of the minority with
    a view to the reopening of the Heybeliada Greek Orthodox theological
    college (the Halki Seminary).

    It lists the question of the registration of places of worship and
    the question of the mazbut properties confiscated since 1974 and says,
    "They must be returned to their owners or to the entitled persons or,
    where the return of the assets is impossible, to provide for fair
    compensation." The report specifically mentions the Orthodox Syriac
    monastery of Mor Gabriel, one of the oldest Christian monasteries in
    the world, founded in A.D. 397. It says the land of monastery should
    be protected in its entirety.

    It advises the Turkish government to take practical measures to make
    it possible for members of minorities to join the police force, the
    military, the judiciary and the bureaucracy. The report asks for the
    full implementation of Law No. 3998, which states that the cemeteries
    of minority communities cannot be handed over to municipalities so
    as to prevent the building of housing, something which has occurred
    at certain Jewish cemeteries.

    In the light of recent attacks on religious minorities, PACE asks
    the government to firmly condemn all violence against members of
    religious minorities, conduct effective investigations and promptly
    prosecute people responsible for violence or threats against members
    of religious minorities, particularly in light of the murders of a
    Roman Catholic priest in 2006, three Protestants in Malatya in April
    2007 and prominent Armenian-Turkish writer Hrant Dink in 2007.

    In an attempt to revitalize the minority schools that were closed in
    Turkey due to low enrolment, the assembly urges the government to adapt
    legislation so as to allow children from non-Muslim minorities, but who
    do not have Turkish nationality, to be admitted to minority schools.

    Finally, PACE recommends that Turkey should institute an office
    of ombudsman as soon as possible to avoid tension in society and
    make anti-Semitic statements and other types of hate speech criminal
    offenses. As in the Greek case, it also urges the development of a code
    of ethics by the media on respect for religious minorities in Turkey.

    To-do list for Greece

    PACE urges Greece to provide support for minority schools, resolve
    problems with vakıfs (foundations for the Muslim minority), allow
    the Muslim minority to choose its muftis freely, promote economic and
    infrastructural development in Thrace, resolve nationality issues and
    fully implement the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
    concerning freedom of religion. It calls for freedom of association
    with respect to titles, allowing associations to use the word "Turkish"
    in their name.

    What is more, the PACE report asks for the full and speedy
    implementation of the 2008 legislation that provides for quota-based
    admission to the civil service for members of the Muslim minority. It
    calls upon the Greek government to embark on a national campaign
    against racism and intolerance, stressing that diversity is to be
    regarded not as a threat but as a source of enrichment. In that
    respect, it also asks the government to encourage the development
    of a code of ethics by the media on respect for religious minorities
    and to penalize any incitements to hatred passed on by the media.
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