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Turkey Still Imposes Restrictions On Religious Freedom, Report Says

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  • Turkey Still Imposes Restrictions On Religious Freedom, Report Says

    TURKEY STILL IMPOSES RESTRICTIONS ON RELIGIOUS FREEDOM, REPORT SAYS

    AINA, CA
    Posted GMT 9-17-2007 14:44:43

    ANKARA -- The U.S. State Department announced that the Turkish
    government generally respects the freedom of religion but still
    imposes some restrictions on Muslim and other religious groups and on
    Muslim religious expression in government and state-run institutions,
    including universities.

    "There was no change in the status of respect for religious freedom
    by the government during the reporting period, and government policy
    continued to contribute to the generally free practice of religion,"
    the U.S. State Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and
    Labor said in a report titled "International Religious Freedom Report
    2007" released on Sept. 14 in Washington D.C.

    "There were reports of societal abuses and discrimination based on
    religious belief or practice.

    Violent attacks and threats against non-Muslims during the reporting
    period created an atmosphere of pressure and diminished freedom for
    some non-Muslim communities. Although proselytizing is legal in the
    country, some Muslims, Christians, and Bahais faced a few restrictions
    and occasional harassment for alleged proselytizing or unauthorized
    meetings," the report said.

    The report put into the spotlight problems of religious minorities
    arguing that they were effectively blocked from careers in
    state institutions because of their faith. "Christians, Bahais,
    and some Muslims faced societal suspicion and mistrust, and
    more radical Islamist elements continued to express anti-Semitic
    sentiments. Additionally, persons wishing to convert from Islam to
    another religion sometimes experienced social harassment and violence
    from relatives and neighbors," it said.

    The report underlined that apart from its 99 percent Muslim population
    Turkey hosts approximately 65,000 Armenian Orthodox Christians,
    23,000 Jews, and up to 4,000 Greek Orthodox Christians. There also
    are approximately 10,000 Bahais; an estimated 15,000 Syrian Orthodox
    (Syriac) Christians; 5,000 Yezidis; 3,300 Jehovah's Witnesses; 3,000
    Protestants; and small, undetermined numbers of Bulgarian, Chaldean,
    Nestorian, Georgian, Roman Catholic, and Maronite Christians, according
    to the State's Department's report.

    It also said that there are 1,100 Christian missionaries in the
    country, according to estimates.

    Criticizing the status of the foundations:

    The report criticized Turkey for not responding to the needs of
    non-Muslim religious groups with an appropriate law. It said an
    amendment introduced to Parliament to lift the ban on non-Muslim
    groups to get their properties back was vetoed by the president and
    Parliament did not take it up in its agenda again.

    "Even before the veto, the final text of the law had disappointed many
    as it failed to address the issue of restitution and ignored certain
    properties such as cemeteries and school assets not registered under
    any foundation. Foundations were unable to acquire legal ownership
    of properties registered under names of third parties, including
    properties registered under the names of saints or archangels, during
    periods when foundations could not own property in their own name."

    The report emphasized that implementing regulations of the law on
    foundations have led to interference in the election of foundation
    boards, the treatment of charitable community foundations as business
    corporations for tax purposes, the freezing of revenue from real
    estate transactions, and a ban on transferring surplus income from
    one foundation to another.

    The Alevis:

    The report mentions the situation of Alevis an Islamic minority
    sect. Representatives of Alevi organizations maintained that they often
    faced obstacles when attempting to establish cem houses (places of
    gathering). They said there were approximately 100 cem houses in the
    country; a number they claimed was insufficient to meet their needs,"
    the report said.

    It added that Alevi children have the same compulsory religious
    education as all Muslims, and many Alevis alleged discrimination in
    the government's failure to include any of their doctrines or beliefs
    in religious instruction classes in public schools.

    Churches face challenges

    "Churches operating in the country generally face administrative
    challenges to employ foreign church personnel, apart from the Catholic
    Church and congregations linked to the diplomatic community," the
    report said.

    Missionary activities:

    According to the report, police arrested four street evangelists in
    Istanbul for "missionary activity," disturbing the peace, and insulting
    Islam, late April in 2007. Similarly, the members of Jehovah' Witnesses
    reported continuing official harassment.

    "The authorities continued to monitor the activities of Eastern
    Orthodox churches but generally did not interfere with their religious
    activities; however, significant restrictions were placed on the
    administration of the churches. The government does not recognize
    the ecumenical status of the Greek Orthodox Patriarch, acknowledging
    him only as the head of the country's Greek Orthodox community,"
    the report said.

    The ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul continued to seek to reopen
    the Halki seminary on the island of Heybeli in the Sea of Marmara,
    the report said.

    Nationalist sentiments:

    The report also touched on the killings of a German protestant
    in Malatya and said: "There were reports of religiously motivated
    killings during the reporting period.

    On April 18, 2007, three members of a Protestant church in Malatya,
    including a German citizen, were tortured and killed in the office
    of a company that publishes books on Christianity. The suspects of
    the killings had notes on their persons claiming, "we did it for our
    religion. May this be a lesson to the enemies of religion.'"

    "Death threats against Christian American citizens continue to be a
    concern. For example, Christian American citizens living in the country
    received religion-based death threats via letters and voicemails,
    stating that if they did not return to America they would be killed,"
    the report said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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