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ANKARA: Foundations Law pleases neither nationalists nor minorities

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  • ANKARA: Foundations Law pleases neither nationalists nor minorities

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb. 22, 2008


    Foundations Law pleases neither nationalists nor minorities


    Turkey's nationalist politicians have stated that they are most
    uneasy about a law ratified by Parliament on Wednesday to return
    properties confiscated by the state to non-Muslim religious minority
    foundations, while the minorities in question have said they too find
    the law dissatisfactory.


    The law also allows minority foundations to receive funding from
    foreign countries. Nationalists say allowing minority foundations too
    much freedom in their dealings with foreign countries would run
    contrary to the principle of reciprocity, as not all Turkish
    foundations in foreign countries have the same rights. Non-Muslims
    state that they are offended by this argument, saying it turns them
    into hostages in their own country. However, minority groups say
    despite some improvements in their property rights, the new law risks
    exacerbating the problems of non-Muslim minority foundations.

    The EU has long been pressing Turkey to pass the measure that would
    allow the foundations belonging to minority groups to reclaim seized
    assets -- including churches, school buildings and orphanages -- that
    were registered in the names of saints. EU officials hailed the
    decision, including EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn, who said:
    "The adoption of the new law on foundations is a welcome step
    forward.

    This is an important issue for Turkey, and one that all EU
    institutions have regularly highlighted as important to ensure
    fundamental rights and freedoms for all Turkish citizens."

    The law would also allow Muslim foundations to receive financial aid
    >From foreign countries. The reform appears designed to meet
    conditions set by the EU for Turkey's membership in the bloc.

    Parliament passed the measure 242-72. President Abdullah Gül, a close
    associate of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan, is expected to
    approve the new legislation .

    The improvements include allowing non-Muslim foundations to work
    together with organizations in foreign countries, establish branches
    and representation offices abroad, set up umbrella organizations and
    become members of organizations established abroad.

    Nationalists are ill at ease with the law. Deputy leader of the
    Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) Mehmet Þandýr in evaluating
    Wednesday's vote on the minority bill said on Thursday in a statement
    he made to the press that his party has made all the warnings it
    possibly could against the law. "Why this persistence and obstinacy?
    Which problem of the nation will you be solving with this law?" he
    asked. Þandýr said the law was passed not for the country and the
    nation but because the EU and the US demand it.

    "From our perspective, this is no innocent law. It is an obvious
    attack on the sovereignty and independence of the Turkish nation. It
    is a violation of Lausanne, the European Human Rights Convention and
    the Constitution. This is a political decision, and it will have
    political consequences. It is a law of treason that is preparing a
    state similar to the partitioning and eventual collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire."

    Þandýr, in a statement directed at the Justice and Development Party
    (AK Party), said, "You cannot possibly defend such an extensive range
    of freedoms without violating the Treaty of Lausanne." It was in the
    1923 Lausanne Treaty where most foreign powers recognized the current
    frontiers and the establishment of the Republic of Turkey. He claimed
    that the future of Turkey was being pushed into chaos by the law.
    "This law has passed now but when we come to power we will annul this
    law," he said.

    In a statement released a few days before the law was passed the
    Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation (TESEV), which works
    together with committees representing minority groups, agreed, t that
    it was a violation of the 1923 treaty, but for an entirely different
    reason. "The present text of the draft is not acceptable because it
    violates the fundamental rights and liberties of non-Muslim citizens
    that are guaranteed under the Turkish Constitution, the European
    Convention on Human Rights and the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne," TESEV
    said.

    TESEV has appealed to the government and Parliament many times to
    listen to representatives of non-Muslim foundations and come up with
    a new bill, saying the one adopted on Wednesday was not capable of
    solving the problems of Turkey's minority foundations.

    Meanwhile, State Minister Hayatý Yazýcý, who provided information on
    the law, said Parliament had passed historical legislation. "From now
    on, wherever there are buildings left from Ottoman foundations in the
    world from Kosovo, Serbia, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Greece, Syria to
    Algeria, Turkey will be restoring and maintaining these," he noted.

    He said nobody had reason to have any suspicions about the law.
    "There is a sensitive republican government that protects rights and
    laws in every sphere. The only target of this government is to serve
    everyone equally," said Yazýcý.

    Background on seizure of minority property

    Turkey seized some properties owned by minority foundations in 1974
    around the time of an intervention on Cyprus that followed a coup
    attempt by supporters of union with Greece.

    The country's population of 70 million, mostly Muslim, includes
    65,000 Armenian Orthodox Christians, 23,000 Jews and fewer than 2,500
    Greek Orthodox Christians.

    Parliament first approved the measure in November of 2006. But the
    president at the time, Ahmet Necdet Sezer, was a secularist who was
    often at odds with Erdoðan's Islamic-rooted government, and he vetoed
    it.

    Critics have said, however, that the measure makes no clear provision
    for assets that have since been sold on to other people.

    Religious minorities have often complained of discrimination in
    Turkey, which has a history of conflict with Greece, a country that
    is predominantly Christian, and with Armenians, another mostly
    Christian group.

    22.02.2008

    Today's Zaman with wires Ýstanbul
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