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ANKARA: US Armenian Property Cases Against Turkey

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  • ANKARA: US Armenian Property Cases Against Turkey

    US ARMENIAN PROPERTY CASES AGAINST TURKEY
    by ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 15 2011
    Turkey

    There are a couple of pending property cases against Turkey introduced
    by American citizens of Armenian descent in California courts in
    the US.

    One of these cases concerns a large amount of land in Adana which
    partly covers the İncirlik American air base (Alex Bakalian, et al v.
    Central Bank the Rep of Turkey, et al). I have been trying to follow
    the Bakalian case, in which a California district court decided
    that the defendants had been lawfully served and has required the
    defendants to respond to the Armenian complaints last month. So,
    we have now a very concrete case against Turkey. American laws
    (Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act) allow plaintiffs to sue sovereign
    nations in US courts. In the latest edition of the Agos weekly, I
    saw an interview with Bakalian's lawyer, Mr. Vartkes Yeghiayan, and
    I contacted Agos to get the lawyer's original commentary in English.

    Agos correspondent Ms. Beril Eski kindly agreed and sent me the
    original of the interview. It is a little long, so here is a cut
    version. Let's read Mr. Yeghiayan's comments about the İncirlik case.

    "Beginning in 1915, the government of the Ottoman Turkish Empire began
    ordering the collection of real and personal property and deportation
    of Turkish Armenians. A series of discriminatory regulations,
    directives, and decrees issued by the Ottoman Turkish Empire between
    1915 and 1923, collectively known as the Emvali Metruke, sought to
    provide legal cover for the unlawful expropriation of the property
    and assets of Turkish Armenians, including that of our plaintiffs. ...

    "In response to the outrage expressed by the international community
    over the large-scale deportations, murders and expropriation of
    property from Turkish Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish government,
    government telegrams posted in 1916 demonstrate that proceeds from
    the sale of properties left behind by deportees were deposited with
    Defendant T.C. Ziraat Bankası ...upon information and belief held in
    trust and for safekeeping on behalf of the rightful Armenian owners
    in accordance with other Emvali Metruke. ...

    "In 1923, Turkey became the successor state to the Ottoman Turkish
    Empire. ...

    "In 1928, new laws came into effect, transferring all 'abandoned' real
    and personal property to the Turkish Treasury. Since its establishment
    in 1856, the Imperial Ottoman Bank acted as the state Treasurer and was
    responsible for collecting state revenues. Defendant Merkez Bankası
    of the Republic of Turkey was established in its present format in
    1931 as the successor to the Imperial Ottoman Bank. ...

    "Since the establishment of the Republic of Turkey in 1923, the
    plaintiffs' real property and assets in Adana that were not sold have
    been continuously, wrongfully owned and controlled by the Turkish
    government and used for commercial activities by Turkey and the
    Turkish Merkez Bankası in conjunction with numerous private commercial
    enterprises operating both in the United States and elsewhere. Income
    earned from those properties, including rental income being paid by
    the United States government to lease the plaintiffs' property, flows
    continuously into the Merkez Bankası. Thus, Defendants Turkey and
    the Merkez Bankası are profiting from and being unjustly enriched by
    their possession of and/or use of proceeds from such stolen property
    belonging to the plaintiffs. ...

    "Our relations with the Turkish Foreign Affairs and that of the 'time
    limitation' also known as the 'Statute of Limitation' are interlinked
    in a sense that the Republic of Turkey does fall under the Foreign
    Sovereign Immunities Act, however, due to illicit expropriation and use
    of property for the purpose of making gain -- 'Commercial Enterprise,'
    the Armenian Genocide -- 'Violation of International Humanitarian Law'
    and lastly the 'Violation of the Lausanne Treaty' of which Turkey is
    a signatory. ...

    "When we win the case and should the Republic of Turkey or the banks
    default on the judgment brought forth against them, we will move to
    seize properties belonging to the aforementioned in equal value to
    our claims."

    When I got the interview I hoped to find answers to some legal
    questions that crossed my mind, the most important off which was,
    of course, about the statute of limitations. The dispute about time
    limitations must be the vital part of this case and, I guess, it
    will be hard to explain to the court why the statute of limitations
    cannot be applicable in this case, which was brought almost 100 years
    after the actual seizure of said property. I can gather some core
    arguments from Mr. Yeghiayan's explanations on time limitations,
    but they do not answer the many questions that may possibly be put
    to any plaintiff who brings this kind of case under any legal system
    in Europe, for example. Even if we accept that the plaintiffs had
    the opportunity to start such a case for the first time when the
    Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act came into force in the US, why did
    they wait 35 years to do so? There are many legal questions that
    can be asked in connection with the statute of limitations. Anyway,
    I will continue to follow this case and share my comments with you.

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