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ANKARA: Christian monastery in Turkey wins back land

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  • ANKARA: Christian monastery in Turkey wins back land

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 25 2009


    Christian monastery in Turkey wins back land


    One of the world's oldest functioning Christian monasteries has won a
    legal battle to have land it had owned for centuries restored to it,
    after a Turkish court ruled on Friday it could not be claimed by the
    state.

    The dispute over the boundaries of Mor Gabriel, a fifth-century Syriac
    Orthodox monastery in eastern Turkey, had raised concerns over freedom
    of religion and human rights for non-Muslim minorities in Turkey, a
    predominantly Muslim country and European Union aspirant. In a
    statement, the Syriac Universal Alliance (SUA), a leading Syriac group
    based in Sweden, said a Turkish court in Midyat had reversed an
    initial decision by the land registry court to grant villages some 110
    hectares (272 acres) of monastery land. But it added another three
    cases relating to the monastery's former land remained open, two of
    which had been postponed.

    The row began when Turkish government land officials redrew the
    boundaries around Mor Gabriel and the surrounding villages in 2008 to
    update a national land registry. The Syriac Orthodox monks said the
    new boundaries turned over to the villages large plots of monastery
    land and some designated as public forest.

    The case became a rallying cry for Christian church groups across
    Europe, and had been postponed several times. Syriacs are one of the
    oldest communities in Turkey and still speak Aramaic, the language of
    Jesus Christ. But they are not officially designated a minority in
    Turkey like the Greeks or Armenians, so have no special protection
    under the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne's provisions for non-Muslim
    minorities. The ruling AK Party government has said it has expanded
    the rights of minorities. But the EU and U.S. President Barack Obama,
    during a trip to Turkey in April, have urged Ankara to do more to
    promote religious freedom.


    REUTERS Ä°STANBUL
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