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Non-Muslims Invited To Join Turkey's Police Forces

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  • Non-Muslims Invited To Join Turkey's Police Forces

    NON-MUSLIMS INVITED TO JOIN TURKEY'S POLICE FORCES

    2013-11-06

    An exchange between the Assyrian Orthodox Church and the police
    directorate raised hopes of ending what some describe as discriminatory
    practices.

    By Menekse Tokyay for SES Turkiye in Istanbul -- 06/11/13

    A recent exchange between the police directorate-general and a leader
    in the Assyrian Orthodox Church spurred new hope that public sector
    institutions will openly accept non-Muslims.

    Turkey's police directorate invited non-Muslims to join the
    force. [AFP]

    Although there is no official ruling or policy that prevents
    non-Muslims from public service, there have been very few non-Muslim
    police, army officers or judges. The non-Muslim population is estimated
    at about 100,000, including 60,000 Armenians, 23,000 Jews, and 15,000
    Syriacs. Turkey's population is about 74 million.

    Yusuf Cetin, the Istanbul metropolitan of the Assyrian Orthodox Church,
    raised the issue in a recent interview with the daily Milliyet.

    "Why can't people of different faiths be assigned to the posts within
    the civil services, military and the police?" Cetin asked.

    The police directorate-general responded on Twitter, saying "all
    citizens of the Republic of Turkey may join police forces regardless
    of religion, race and sect."

    "We do invite our Syriac citizens, too, to attend the exams of the
    police department and become police officers," the statement continued.

    Cem Sofuoglu, an attorney representing the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate,
    said the police directorate's statement was encouraging and inspired
    hope that a silent prejudice against minorities might one day be
    broken.

    "I expect that they will hire some non-Muslim staff as an example
    for other minorities to join them. For years, there was a threat
    perception toward non-Muslims, who were seen as internal foes who
    would divide the country. However, this appeal is a sign that this
    perception is changing for the benefit of normalisation and internal
    peace," Sofuoglu told SES Turkiye.

    Sofuoglu said the move should be accompanied by comprehensive training
    among police forces to eliminate prejudices against non-Muslims.

    "Otherwise, police forces can act with nationalistic reflexes and
    may cast their new non-Muslim colleagues aside because these people
    have been trained with nationalistic paradigms which have an impact
    over their perception and behaviour toward other people," he added.

    Non-Muslim representatives and human rights experts are suspicious
    of the public appeal, saying there is a need for far-reaching steps
    to remove established discriminatory attitudes.

    They seek a change in the text of the police admission oath,
    which emphasises the adherence to Turkish nationalism, and also seek
    training for police to avoid using words or phrases that are offensive
    to non-Muslims.

    Aras Ergunes, an Armenian citizen of Turkey and a social sciences
    scholar at Kocaeli University, questioned whether the police
    department's appeal is genuine. He added that the police forces are
    known for their nationalistic character, noting that police took
    photos with Ogun Samast after the then-17-year-old murdered Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink in 2007.

    "Just as limiting mother tongue education to private schools that
    cost tens of thousands of TL crassly tells poor people in the Kurdish
    region to take the opportunity if they can, the police directorate's
    invitation to non-Muslims condones an institution that murdered an
    intellectual who could have been the voice of minority populations,
    and took a souvenir photo with the killer," Ergunes said.

    "There is not a legal barrier for non-Muslims to become police or
    military officers. In fact, you cannot depict such restrictions in
    the legal texts, otherwise the state would have to confess its own
    discriminatory practices," he added.

    Ergunes said as long as state authorities see non-Muslims as a threat,
    it is illogical to expect them to have non-Muslims on the police force,
    which is responsible for protecting the state against threats.

    Behnan Konutgan, pastor of Eminonu Immanuel Protestant Church in
    Istanbul, has experienced discriminatory practices first-hand.

    "I was performing my military duty in October 1980 in Ankara as a
    reserve officer. There was a need for translators knowing English and
    Arabic. I know both of these languages very well, in written and in
    spoken," Konutgan told SES Turkiye.

    He filled out the application form, and one day before the exam,
    he was eliminated from the candidacy list because the staff told him
    that only Muslims and Turkish people could apply to that post.

    Konutgan said discriminatory practices against non-Muslims in Turkey
    cannot be eradicated overnight with just a Twitter appeal, and there
    is a need for a change in mentality, ranging from the school curricula
    to vocational training, in order to have a sustainable peace between
    Muslims and non-Muslims.

    What steps should be taken to prevent discrimination against
    non-Muslims in Turkey's public institutions? Share your thoughts in
    the comments section.

    http://turkey.setimes.com/en_GB/articles/ses/articles/features/departments/society/2013/11/06/feature-01



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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