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  • Armenian Bar Association on the Protection and Return of Churches in

    NEWS RELEASE
    Armenian Bar Association
    P.O. Box 29111
    Los Angeles, CA 90029
    Tel: 323-666-6288
    Fax: 323-666-6288
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.armenianbar.org


    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Bar Association
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.armenianbar.org/

    Dear Media Partners and Friends:

    The Armenian Bar Association weighed in on an important issue under
    consideration now by the House of Representatives Committee on Foreign
    Relations. We did so with the letter, attached above, which was
    distributed today to the 45 members of the Foreign Relations
    Committee. Copied below is the text and background of the pending
    legislative bill.

    Best to all.

    Armen K. Hovannisian
    Chairman, Armenian Bar Association



    113th CONGRESS
    2d Session
    H. R. 4347
    To require the Secretary of State to provide an annual report to
    Congress regarding United States Government efforts to survey and
    secure the return, protection, and restoration of stolen, confiscated,
    or otherwise unreturned Christian properties in the Republic of Turkey
    and in those areas currently occupied by the Turkish military in
    northern Cyprus.

    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

    Mr. ROYCE (for himself and Mr. ENGEL) introduced the following bill;
    which was referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs
    ________________________________
    A BILL
    To require the Secretary of State to provide an annual report to
    Congress regarding United States Government efforts to survey and
    secure the return, protection, and restoration of stolen, confiscated,
    or otherwise unreturned Christian properties in the Republic of Turkey
    and in those areas currently occupied by the Turkish military in
    northern Cyprus.
    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
    States of America in Congress assembled,
    SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
    This Act may be cited as the `Turkey Christian Churches Accountability Act'.
    SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
    Congress finds the following:
    (1) United States diplomatic leadership contributes meaningfully and
    materially to the protection internationally of religious minorities
    and their faith-based practices and places of worship.
    (2) The International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 states that `It
    shall be the policy of the United States to condemn violations of
    religious freedom, and to promote, and to assist other governments in
    the promotion of, the fundamental right to freedom of religion.'.
    (3) The House of Representatives, when it adopted House Resolution 306
    on December 13, 2011, called on the Secretary of State, in all
    official contacts with Turkish leaders, to urge Turkey to `allow the
    rightful church and lay owners of Christian church properties, without
    hindrance or restriction, to organize and administer prayer services,
    religious education, clerical training, appointments, and succession',
    and to `return to their rightful owners all Christian churches and
    other places of worship, monasteries, schools, hospitals, monuments,
    relics, holy sites, and other religious properties, including movable
    properties, such as artwork, manuscripts, vestments, vessels, and
    other artifacts'.
    (4) On September 28, 2010, the House of Representatives adopted House
    Resolution 1631, calling for the protection of religious sites and
    artifacts, as well as for general respect for religious freedom in
    Turkish-occupied areas of northern Cyprus.
    (5) Christian churches and communities in the Republic of Turkey and
    in the occupied areas of Cyprus continue to be prevented from fully
    practicing their faith and face serious obstacles to reestablishing
    full legal, administrative, and operational control over stolen,
    expropriated, confiscated, or otherwise unreturned churches and other
    religious properties and sites.
    (6) In many cases the rightful Christian church authorities, including
    relevant Holy Sees located outside Turkey and Turkish-occupied
    territories, are obstructed from safeguarding, repairing, or otherwise
    caring for their holy sites upon their ancient homelands, because the
    properties have been destroyed, expropriated, converted into mosques,
    storage facilities, or museums, or subjected to deliberate neglect.
    (7) While the Turkish Government has made efforts in recent years to
    address these issues and to return some church properties, much more
    must be done to rectify the situation of Christian communities in
    these areas, as a vast majority of Christian holy sites continue to be
    held by the Turkish Government or by third parties.
    (8) On April 24, 2013, Catholicos Karekin II and Catholicos Aram I,
    spiritual leaders of the millions of Christian Armenian faithful in
    Armenia and the Diaspora, noted that Turkey continued to unjustly
    `[retain] confiscated church estates and properties, and religious and
    cultural treasures of the Armenian people', and called on Turkey `[t]o
    immediately return the Armenian churches, monasteries, church
    properties, and spiritual and cultural treasures, to the Armenian
    people as their rightful owner'.
    (9) The boundaries of Turkey encompass significant historic Christian
    lands, including the biblical lands of Armenia (present-day Anatolia),
    home to many of early Christianity's pivotal events and holy sites,
    such as Mount Ararat, the location cited in the Bible as the landing
    place of Noah's Ark.
    (10) These ancient territories were for thousands of years home to a
    large, indigenous Christian population, but, because of years of
    repressive Turkish Government policies, historic atrocities, and
    brutal persecution, today Christians constitute less than one percent
    of Turkey's population.
    (11) As a result of the Turkish Government's invasion of the northern
    area of the Republic of Cyprus on July 20, 1974, and the Turkish
    military's continued illegal and discriminatory occupation of portions
    of this sovereign state, the future and very existence of Greek
    Cypriot, Maronite, and Armenian communities are now in grave jeopardy.
    (12) Under the Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus, freedom of
    worship has been severely restricted, access to religious sites
    blocked, religious sites systematically destroyed, and a large number
    of religious and archaeological objects illegally confiscated or
    stolen.
    (13) The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom,
    in its 2012 annual report, criticized `the Turkish government's
    systematic and egregious limitations on the freedom of religion', and
    warned that `[l]ongstanding policies continue to threaten the
    survivability and viability of minority religious communities in
    Turkey'.
    (14) Christian minorities in Turkey continue to face discrimination,
    prohibitions on the training and succession of clergy, and violent
    attacks, which have at times resulted in lenient sentencing, including
    the reduced sentence for the murderer of the Catholic Church's head
    bishop in Turkey, Luigi Padovese, in June 2010, or delayed justice,
    including the unresolved torture and murder, in April 2007, of three
    employees of a Protestant Bible publishing house in Malatya, Turkey.
    (15) The Government of Turkey, in contravention of its international
    legal obligations, refuses to recognize the 2,000-year-old Sacred See
    of the Ecumenical Patriarchate's international status, has confiscated
    the large majority of the assets and properties of the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate, Greek cultural and educational foundations, maintains
    that candidates for the position of Ecumenical Patriarch must be
    Turkish citizens, and continues to refuse to reopen the Theological
    School at Halki, thus impeding training and succession for the Greek
    Orthodox clergy in Turkey.
    (16) The Government of Turkey, in contravention of its international
    legal obligations, continues to place substantial restrictions and
    other limitations upon the Armenian Patriarchate's right to train and
    educate clergy and select and install successors without government
    interference.
    (17) Religious freedom is an essential cornerstone of democracy that
    promotes respect for individual liberty, which contributes to greater
    stability, and is therefore a priority value for the United States to
    promote in its engagement with other countries.
    SEC. 3. REPORT REQUIREMENTS.
    (a) In General- Not later than 180 days after the date of the
    enactment of this Act and annually thereafter until 2021, the
    Secretary of State shall submit to the Committee on Foreign Affairs of
    the House of Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Relations of
    the Senate a report on the status and return of stolen, confiscated,
    or otherwise unreturned Christian churches, places of worship, and
    other properties in or from the Republic of Turkey and in the areas of
    northern Cyprus occupied by the Turkish military that shall contain
    the following:
    (1) A comprehensive listing of all the Christian churches, places of
    worship, and other properties, such as monasteries, schools,
    hospitals, monuments, relics, holy sites, and other religious
    properties, including movable properties, such as artwork,
    manuscripts, vestments, vessels, and other artifacts, in or from
    Turkey and in the territories of the Republic of Cyprus under military
    occupation by Turkey that are claimed as stolen, confiscated, or
    otherwise wrongfully removed from the ownership of their rightful
    Christian church owners.
    (2) Description of all engagement over the previous year on this issue
    by officials of the Department of State with representatives of the
    Republic of Turkey regarding the return to their rightful owners of
    all Christian churches, places of worship, and other properties, such
    as monasteries, schools, hospitals, monuments, relics, holy sites, and
    other religious properties, including movable properties, such as
    artwork, manuscripts, vestments, vessels, and other artifacts, both
    those located within Turkey's borders and those under control of
    Turkish military forces in the occupied northern areas of Cyprus.
    (b) Inclusion in Annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices and
    International Religious Freedom Report- The information required under
    subsection (a) shall be summarized in the annual Country Reports on
    Human Rights Practices and International Religious Freedom Reports.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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