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  • F18News Summary: Azerbaijan; Russia; Turkey;

    FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway
    http://www.forum18.org/

    The right to believe, to worship and witness
    The right to change one's belief or religion
    The right to join together and express one's belief

    ========================================== ======
    12 July 2007
    AZERBAIJAN: DID "THIN" PASTOR BEAT UP FIVE "STRONG" POLICEMEN?
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?arti cle_id=993
    The hearing of the case against detained Baptist pastor Zaur Balaev begins
    tomorrow (13 July) at 10 am, Forum 18 News Service has been told by Judge
    Seifuli Seifullaev. Azerbaijan's Baptist leader, Ilya Zenchenko, insists
    the charges are false - as do over 50 other people, including 25 who were
    present at the service, other villagers who are not Christians, and the
    leaders of eight Christian churches in Azerbaijan. "Zaur is accused of
    beating up five policemen and damaging the door of a police car," Zenchenko
    stated. "But how could a thin man like Zaur beat up five strong policemen?"
    Police initially alleged that Balaev had resisted being taken to a police
    station by setting a dog onto them. "The dog has completely disappeared
    from the accusation," Zenchenko told Forum 18. However, the Prosecutor's
    accusation states that Balaev is a Christian and therefore a threat to
    society and to social security. The date for the formal trial is due to be
    set at tomorrow's preliminary hearing.


    11 July 2007
    RUSSIA: TATAR MUSLIM WOMEN FEAR PURGE FOLLOWING SAID NURSI BAN
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 991
    Following extensive state harassment and a ban imposed by a Moscow court
    in May on the Russian translation of Said Nursi's book Risale-i Nur
    (Messages of Light), a group of 50 women in Tatarstan who study the late
    Turkish theologian's writings on the Koran fear a new crackdown. "We
    Muslims who read Said Nursi's books are afraid for our lives and the lives
    of our loved ones," they told Forum 18 News Service. Although no reprisals
    have occurred since the Moscow ban, they note that television stations have
    reported that if the appeal against the ban fails anyone reading the banned
    work will be liable to prosecution. Eduard Ismagilov of the Tatarstan
    branch of the FSB secret police staunchly denied to Forum 18 the women's
    allegations of abuse. Valeri Kuzmin of Tatarstan Public Prosecutor's Office
    - who initiated the case that led up to the Moscow ban - also denied that
    officials used coercion against Nursi followers. However, he told Forum 18
    they are dangerous "because their literature harms people's health" and
    "because they lure children into their activity".


    11 July 2007
    RUSSIA: OFFICIALS DENY HARASSING MUSLIM WOMEN'S STUDY GROUP
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_i d=992
    Exactly two years ago, officials in the Volga republic of Tatarstan began
    harassing a group of 50 women who study the writings on the Koran of the
    late Turkish theologian Said Nursi. Group members have told Forum 18 News
    Service that flats were raided and searched, often without a warrant, books
    and notes confiscated and several of the women subjected to forced
    psychiatric examinations. After ailing 62-year-old Fakhima Nizamutdinova
    was warned in autumn 2006 that she would be taken to the FSB secret police
    if she failed to cooperate, she suffered two heart attacks. One group
    member told Forum 18 that Nizamutdinova has still not recovered and rarely
    leaves her flat. Asked why sweeping searches, involving the FSB and a
    helicopter, had been conducted at the group's meeting places, Valeri Kuzmin
    of Tatarstan Public Prosecutor's Office told Forum 18 that "the aim of the
    searches was to find the literature", even though no court had then deemed
    it "extremist".


    10 July 2007
    TURKEY: DANGEROUS CONSEQUENCES OF INTOLERANCE OF RELIGIOUS MINORITIES
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?arti cle_id=990
    The Turkish government has long failed to tackle deep-rooted
    discrimination against religious minorities - by refusing to guarantee
    their position in law or to crack down on intolerance from officials, the
    media and in school curricula. This has left religious minorities
    dangerously exposed, argues Otmar Oehring of the German Catholic charity
    Missio
    <http://www.missio.de/dcms/sites /missio2/missio-ueber-sich/leitthemen/menschenrech te/index.html>.
    For, as Dr Oehring observes in this personal commentary for Forum 18
    <http://www.forum18.org>, hostility to religious minorities is stoked by
    widespread xenophobia. Following the brutal murder of three Protestants in
    Malatya in April, attacks on and threats against religious minorities have
    only increased. Official "protection" for religious minority leaders and
    places of worship seems designed as much to control as to protect them.
    * See full article below. *


    10 July 2007
    TURKEY: DANGEROUS CONSEQUENCES OF INTOLERANCE OF RELIGIOUS MINORITIES

    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?art icle_id=990
    By Dr. Otmar Oehring, Head of the Human Rights Office of Missio
    <http://www.missio.de>

    A shadow still hangs over Turkey's non-Muslim religious minorities,
    following the brutal murder in April of three Protestants in the eastern
    town of Malatya. The murders have not so far produced any serious effort by
    the state to tackle the underlying causes of the murders. No effort has
    been made to tackle the xenophobia and hostility to religious minorities,
    which Turkish Protestants are convinced is a major factor in the murders.
    This official Turkish indifference looks bad to the outside world, notably
    to the European Union (EU).

    Indeed, the situation for religious minorities is getting worse. Threats
    by telephone and in writing against churches, religious minority (eg.
    Armenian Apostolic) schools and individuals are mounting. Ethnic minorities
    - especially the Kurds - are also seeing rising numbers of threats. Public
    discussion is increasing over who should have the right to live in Turkey.
    Should the country only be the home of ethnic Turks?

    Whenever there is a bomb attack, journalists focus on the place of origin
    of the suspects. When Istanbul airport became a target for bombers,
    journalists eagerly pointed out that the suspects came from the Lazistan
    region close to the border with Georgia. The suggestion is that they were
    not real Turks.

    A wider range of religious minority individuals and institutions -
    including Catholic and Protestant churches and their clergy - are now being
    directly threatened with physical attacks. In February 2006, Catholic
    priest Fr Andrea Santoro was murdered in his church in the Black Sea port
    of Trabzon (see F18News 9 February 2006
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=724>).

    Then in April this year came the murder of the three Protestants in
    Malatya - two Turkish Christians, Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel, as well as
    a German, Tilmann Geske. The publishing house, Zirve, where the three
    Protestants were found, had been the target of protests in 2005, demanding
    that it be closed down as its activities were "proselytism" of Muslims. But
    as Turkish Protestants have pointed out with appreciation to Forum 18, the
    Criminal Code has been changed to allow the sharing of beliefs if there are
    no demonstrable political motives.

    However, as Ertugrul Ozkok, editorial writer for Turkey's largest
    newspaper, Hurriyet, wrote the day after the murders: "While only a handful
    of actual murderers is involved, there are many, many assistants." Ozkok
    described the many newspapers who publish intolerant articles about
    Christians and politicians making such statements as "agents of
    provocation".

    These politicians include government ministers, such as Minister of State
    Mehmet Aydin - who controls the government's Presidency of Religious
    Affairs (Diyanet) (see F18News 12 October 2005
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=670>). He claimed on 27
    March 2007 that "the goal of missionary activity is to break up the
    historical, religious, national and cultural unity of the people of
    Turkey". Schools are also a source of what EU officials have privately
    described to Forum 18 as "massive nationalistic indoctrination" (see
    F18News 26 July 2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 817>).

    Politicians repeatedly speak of "missionaries" (usually Christian) as a
    threat to the country and a danger to its people. In a live programme on
    NTV in May 2006, Professor Ali Bardakoglu, who heads the Presidency of
    Religious Affairs, declared: "We are not only telling our people in Turkey
    that Islam is the right (only) religion, but we also inform them about
    missionaries' activities threatening our people." The state-sanctioned
    mufti in the eastern town of Erzincan held a panel discussion on missionary
    activity, Satanism and "dangerous and destructive activity". In November
    2006, one deputy Muharrem Kilic warned Parliament about missionaries who
    have "attacked the Turkish people".

    Even when reporting attacks on religious minorities, media coverage is
    often hostile to the victims and their communities. Such coverage could be
    seen as excusing the attacks - or at the very least sympathising with the
    motives behind them.

    Most recently, two Georgian Orthodox priests from neighbouring Georgia
    were in late spring visiting Borcka in the remote north-east, close to the
    border with Georgia, as part of a tourist group. Although in civilian
    clothes, they were wearing crosses. Recognised as priests, they were set
    upon by three local men in a brutal attack. Turkey's coastal area in the
    north-east is known for its fierce nationalism and xenophobia, routinely
    stoked by the local press. Journalists regularly stir up fears over
    Georgians seeking out fellow ethnic Georgians in local villages by asking
    if visiting Georgians have come on missionary trips.

    In this region, any non-locals attract hostile questions about what they
    are doing. Questions are asked about whether they are ordinary missionaries
    with a hidden agenda. Minister of State Aydin, quoted above, made the often
    repeated claim that "a significant part of missionary activity is done in
    secret".

    The local ethnic Georgian and Laz minorities have long been converted to
    Islam. Although they are now less wary of revealing their Georgian roots,
    no-one would dare to openly admit that their people were originally
    Christian. Turkish intellectuals and some media are prepared to accept that
    they are ethnic minorities, but almost no-one is prepared to accept that
    they can be anything other than Sunni Muslims.

    Certain individuals and institutions have always been a target of attacks,
    most notably the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul, the residence of the
    most senior patriarch in the worldwide Orthodox Christian community. For
    years it has been threatened with attack and it could be highly dangerous
    for Patriarch Bartholomew or other senior bishops to walk the streets of
    the city. The Armenian Patriarch Mesrop - the leader of Turkey's largest
    Christian community - is also under threat and is not as well protected as
    the Ecumenical Patriarch.

    Police officers assigned to protect religious minority leaders in the wake
    of the murder of Fr Santoro are often unarmed. When Patriarch Mesrop
    pointed out publicly in February 2007 the lack of security, the state
    authorities told him he should hire a guard from a private security
    company, which he has now done.

    But religious minorities fear being "protected" by the police, an
    institution known as a hotbed of nationalism. Such minorities sometimes ask
    whether it is wise to be protected by their enemies.

    Turkey's National Intelligence Organisation (MIT) secret police had a flat
    facing the Trabzon church where Fr Santoro was murdered. Presumably, MIT
    has similar observation points close to other minority places of worship.
    Are such observation points to protect the minorities or to control them,
    as religious minorities argue privately? MIT officers also frequently turn
    up at places of worship unannounced. When challenged, they do not deny they
    are from the security apparatus but insist they are there to observe and
    check up on security measures. Some minority places of worship have asked
    such MIT officers to leave.

    Some MIT officers do believe in protecting religious minorities, but
    others are staunch nationalists and signed-up members of the "deep state",
    the nationalist circles in state bodies which regard themselves as the
    custodians of the Ataturkist legacy. Such nationalists are unlikely to
    offer genuine protection. Even with such MIT observation there is no full
    protection, as the murder of Fr Santoro demonstrated, so many doubt the
    value of such observation. Indeed, when a grenade was thrown into the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul in 2005 only police and security
    officials were present outside. Mosques - as well as Cem Houses where Alevi
    Muslim communities worship - do not have such MIT "protection".

    Religious minorities need real protection because of growing nationalist
    hostility and growing threats. But for religious minorities, this is a
    dilemma as the "protection" the state offers is equally bound up with
    control.

    The Turkish authorities have not taken effective steps to either protect
    non-Muslim minorities or address the mass media and education system's
    intolerance of them. As the example of Ertugrul Ozkok of Hurriyet shows,
    there are some Turkish voices from outside the minorities calling for the
    intolerance to be tackled.

    One religious minority that does not appear to face increased pressure in
    the current intolerant climate is the Alevi Muslim community. The
    government continues to refuse to accept that they are a distinct Muslim
    community - it insists either that they are Sunni Muslims or, as senior
    officials of the Presidency of Religious Affairs assert, the question needs
    further study. Alevi Cem Houses are not considered places of worship but
    cultural centres (see F18News 26 July 2006
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=817>). Indeed, the governing
    AKP Party views the Alevis as a source of votes in Turkey's forthcoming
    parliamentary and presidential elections.

    But religious minorities Forum 18 has spoken to do not think that the
    elections will bring to power any political party willing to tackle the
    dangerous media intolerance of religious minorities, or to take the
    dramatic changes necessary to usher in genuine religious freedom (see
    F18News 28 June 2007 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 983>).

    No legal improvements are likely. The Foundations Law - which might have
    resolved property problems for the foundations at least partly allowed to
    some non-Muslim ethnic/religious communities - was vetoed in December 2006
    by President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, a committed secularist but a staunch
    nationalist (see F18News 18 January 2007
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=901>).

    After the veto, the Law was reintroduced to parliament in the same form
    soon after. With the dissolution of Parliament the process has now come to
    a halt. Any progress will depend on the composition of the new Parliament
    to be elected on 22 July. Current signals do not look hopeful that the
    positive elements of the Law will survive.

    Turkey's application to join the EU has stalled and the prospect of
    Turkey's entry seems as far away as ever. Tentative progress to improve
    human rights and religious freedom has ground to a halt. Even on minor
    issues to help religious minorities, where the Turkish authorities promised
    to make progress several years ago, nothing has happened.

    Indeed, it is becoming increasingly clear that fundamental reform of the
    Turkish Constitution, not of individual laws or legal problems, is
    essential for genuine progress (see F18News 13 December 2005
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=704>). So it is not
    surprising that minorities are increasingly turning to the European Court
    of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg, not the Turkish authorities, to
    protect their fundamental right to freedom of thought, conscience and
    belief (see F18News 18 January 2007
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=901>).

    The Catholic Church was specifically promised that at least some of the
    problems it faces would be resolved, when members of the Bishops'
    Conference met Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2005. During Pope
    Benedict's high-profile visit at the end of 2006 (see F18News 22 November
    2006 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 875>), Turkish
    officials agreed to establish joint working groups to resolve the
    difficulties over legal status and property. But nothing has happened,
    despite public prodding by the Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal
    Tarcisio Bertone, in January.

    No progress has been made on legal rights for other non-Muslim minorities.
    In a 1986 ruling, the Turkish Supreme Court in Ankara recognised that the
    Jehovah's Witness are a distinct religion. But the problem for the
    Jehovah's Witnesses - just like all the other religious communities - is
    that they have no legal status whatsoever. All the Supreme Court did was to
    recognise that Jehovah's Witnesses exist - but without recognising that
    they have any legal rights.

    After the Jehovah's Witnesses sought to register a religious association
    in 2005 with the Istanbul Associations Directorate (Dernekler Mudurlugu),
    two cases against them were lodged in the courts. The Jehovah's Witnesses
    were accused of violating the Constitution, though no concrete violations
    were ever specified. The Jehovah's Witnesses won both cases, but in 2006
    the Associations Directorate lodged challenges against these rulings in the
    Supreme Court.

    This denial that Turkey's non-Muslim religious communities have any legal
    status has a very practical impact on the intolerance and physical attacks
    they experience. For example, two young men, Yunus Ercep and Feti Demirtas,
    are among the Jehovah's Witnesses who have been maltreated and repeatedly
    prosecuted in recent years for refusing compulsory military service on
    grounds of religious conscience. One captain told Demirtas: "Pray not to be
    assigned to my military base, since I will make you lead a dog's life. I
    will force you to perform military service." Another told him: "Leave
    Turkey if you do not want to be in the military." In 2003, Ercep was even
    incarcerated for 11 days in a psychiatric hospital for "religious
    paranoia".

    In 2004, Ercep lodged his case over repeated sentencing for conscientious
    objection at the ECHR in Strasbourg (Application No. 43965/04), while
    Demirtas lodged his case in January 2007 (Application No. 5260/07). Despite
    their insistence that their decision to go to Strasbourg is not political,
    taking their cases to an international body could lay Ercep and Demirtas
    open to accusations that they are traitors to their country. The Army
    General Staff called on the people in May 2007 to fight the enemy Kurds, so
    Jehovah's Witnesses who refuse military service are doubly seen as
    traitors.

    The ECHR issued a crucial judgment in January 2007 in favour of a Greek
    Orthodox community foundation (Fener Rum Erkek Lisesi Vakfi) running a High
    School in Istanbul's Fener area (No. 34478/97). In what is a common
    occurrence, the government had confiscated a building from it, but the
    Strasbourg court upheld the community foundation's rights and punished the
    Turkish government with a large fine (see F18News 18 January 2007
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=901>).

    As neither side appealed against the Strasbourg judgment, it became final
    on 9 April. This meant that the government had until 9 July to pay the
    fine.

    In earlier cases the state has simply paid the fine and taken no action to
    change the legal situation to avoid similar violations from happening in
    other cases, or to make restitution to those whose rights have already been
    wronged. This signals to those who encourage intolerance that the rights of
    people who belong to Turkey's religious minorities do not really matter.

    One test will come over the Yedikule Surp Pirgic Ermeni Hastanesi Vakfi, a
    foundation recognised in law as managing Armenian religious property. The
    ECHR struck out the case on 26 June 2007 after a "friendly settlement" with
    the Turkish government (Nos. 50147/99 and 51207/99). The foundation
    complained that its title to certain properties had been declared void. It
    contended that Turkish legislation and its interpretation by the national
    courts deprived foundations belonging to religious minorities within the
    meaning of the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne of all capacity to acquire immovable
    property. This incapacity, in its view, amounted to discrimination in
    relation to other foundations.

    Under the friendly settlement, the Turkish government has undertaken to
    return the relevant properties in their current state to the foundation and
    to pay it 15,000 Euros (26,435 Turkish Lira, 119,522 Norwegian Kroner or
    20,490 US Dollars) for costs and expenses.

    This settlement shows that the Turkish authorities have seen that they
    must reach agreements with religious communities over their minority
    foundations. However, the underlying restrictions on religious minorities'
    foundations seem likely to remain. Still less will such settlements help
    religious minorities achieve full rights to practise their faiths freely.

    Intolerance of religious minorities is growing within Turkish society, and
    - just as with the legal protection of the right to freedom of thought,
    conscience and belief - Turkey's main political parties and state
    institutions show no interest in effectively dealing with the root causes
    of this. Indeed, some within the state are encouraging this intolerance. I
    fear that this will have increasingly dangerous consequences for Turkey's
    religious minorities, and for freedom of thought, conscience and belief for
    all Turkish citizens. (END)

    - Dr Otmar Oehring, head of the human rights office of Missio
    <http://www.missio.de/dcms/sites/missio2 /missio-ueber-sich/leitthemen/menschenrechte/index .html>,
    a Catholic charity based in Germany, contributed this comment to Forum 18
    News Service. Commentaries are personal views and do not necessarily
    represent the views of F18News or Forum 18.

    More analyses and commentaries on religious freedom in Turkey can be found
    at <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?query=& religion=all&country=68>

    A printer-friendly map of Turkey is available at
    <http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpedition s/atlas/index.html?Parent=mideast&Rootmap=turk ey>
    (END)

    © Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855
    You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
    F18News http://www.forum18.org/

    Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at
    http://www.forum18.org/
    From: Baghdasarian
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