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ISTANBUL: US report says Turkey still restricts religious freedom

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  • ISTANBUL: US report says Turkey still restricts religious freedom

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 21 2013


    US report says Turkey still restricts religious freedom


    21 May 2013 /TODAYSZAMAN.COM, Ä°STANBUL

    A US State Department report has said Turkey generally protects
    religious freedom but that there are some laws, policies and
    constitutional provisions that restrict religious freedom.
    The International Religious Freedom Report released by the US State
    Department on Monday said there were reports of abuses of religious
    freedom, including the imprisonment of at least one conscientious
    objector for his religious beliefs. It said the trend in the
    government's respect for religious freedom did not change
    significantly during 2012.

    The report said the Turkish constitution, written by the military
    junta in the early 1980s, defines the country as a secular state and
    provides for freedom of belief, worship and the private expression of
    religious ideas. The constitution prohibits discrimination on
    religious grounds.

    Despite these provisions, the report noted, the government provides
    favorable and prejudicial treatment to Sunni Islamic groups. The
    report stated that the Turkish government donates land for the
    construction of mosques and in many cases funds their construction
    through the Religious Affairs Directorate or municipalities.
    Municipalities pay the utility bills for mosques located within their
    boundaries. These benefits are uniquely available to Sunni Muslims.
    The Turkish Religious Affairs Foundation (TDV), a quasi-governmental
    entity, owns many of the mosques around the country.

    The government considers Alevism a heterodox Muslim sect and does not
    financially support religious worship for Alevi Muslims.

    The state provides training for Sunni Muslim clerics. Religious groups
    other than Sunni Muslims do not have schools to train clerics inside
    the country. The Greek Orthodox Halki Seminary on the island of
    Heybeli closed in 1971 in response to a law that required all private
    colleges to be affiliated with a state-run university and meet
    government requirements that did not permit the operation of a
    seminary within a monastic community. The Greek Orthodox community
    thereby lost the only educational institution in the country for
    training its religious leadership. Co-religionists from outside the
    country assume informal leadership positions in some cases, but
    according to a mandate from the Ä°stanbul Governor's Office, leaders of
    the Greek Orthodox, Armenian Apostolic and Jewish communities must be
    citizens. Religious groups generally face administrative challenges
    when seeking to employ foreign religious personnel because there is no
    visa category for religious workers.

    In general, the report said, members of religious groups that had
    formal recognition during the Ottoman period, including the Greek
    Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox, Syrian Orthodox, Armenian Protestant and
    Jewish communities, reported they had freedom to practice their
    faiths.

    The report noted that the Turkish government continued to return or
    provide compensation for property confiscated from religious community
    foundations in previous decades. The government did not clarify the
    legal authority under which the Greek Orthodox Halki Seminary could
    reopen after being closed for more than 40 years.

    The report also criticized the ban on headscarves in government
    offices and public primary schools, but welcomed as the government did
    not enforce the ban in universities and in some workplaces.

    The report said the Higher Education Board (YÃ-K) continued to refrain
    from enforcing the ban on headscarves in universities. This policy did
    not extend to primary and secondary schools, and the ban remained in
    force for civil servants in public buildings, although some government
    offices unofficially allowed employees to wear headscarves. On Nov.
    27, the Ministry of Education announced new regulations, to take
    effect in 2013, abolishing school uniforms and permitting the wearing
    of headscarves by female students in elective Quran classes and at
    `imam-hatip' schools.

    The report said some religious groups faced restrictions registering
    with the government, owning property and training their members and
    clergy. Although religious speech and conversions are legal, some
    Muslims, Christians and Bahais faced government restrictions,
    surveillance and occasional harassment for alleged proselytizing or
    providing religious instruction to children.

    It included reports of societal abuse and discrimination based on
    religious affiliation, belief or practice. Christians, Baha'is, many
    non-Sunni Muslims, including the sizeable Alevi population, and
    members of other religious minority groups faced threats and societal
    suspicion. Jewish leaders reported some elements of society continued
    to express anti-Semitic sentiments.

    The report added that the government continued to impose significant
    restrictions on religious expression, including Muslim expression, in
    government offices and state-run institutions for the stated reason of
    preserving the `secular state.' However, many state buildings,
    including universities, maintained mesjids (small mosques) in which
    Muslims could pray. The government denied a request from an Alevi
    member of Parliament to establish a small Alevi place of worship in
    the Parliament building, which had a mesjid.

    It said mystical Sufi and other religious-social orders (tarikats) and
    lodges (cemaats), banned officially since 1925, remained active and
    widespread. The government did not enforce this ban.

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