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AFP: US Panel Presses Turkey On Religious Rights

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  • AFP: US Panel Presses Turkey On Religious Rights

    US PANEL PRESSES TURKEY ON RELIGIOUS RIGHTS

    Agence France Presse
    July 20 2011

    WASHINGTON - A US congressional committee on Wednesday urged Turkey
    to ensure religious freedom and return church properties to their
    "rightful owners" in a vote opposed by the Ankara government.

    After a spirited debate, the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    approved a text that says Turkey should "end all forms of religious
    discrimination" and "return to their rightful owners" all churches
    and other Christian historic sites.

    "Religious minorities are under grave threat in today's Turkey,"
    said Representative Ed Royce, a Republican from California.

    "Rather than enjoying protection, very vulnerable religious minority
    groups including the Ecumenical Patriarchate of the Greek Orthodox
    Church are denied full legal status," he said.

    Turkey in 1971 closed a major seminary of the Orthodox Church, which
    has been seated in Istanbul since Byzantine times, as the secular
    state tried to bring universities under its control.

    Turkey does not recognize Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I's title
    as head of Orthodox Christians and considers him only the spiritual
    head of Turkey's tiny Greek Orthodox minority.

    Turkey had voiced opposition to the amendment -- which was included
    in a spending bill -- and noted that the country has historically
    been home to large numbers of Christians and Jews.

    "Turkey opposes the language in the measure because it presents a
    biased, one-sided perspective and wholly disregards the constructive
    steps Turkey has taken to safeguard and expand religious freedom and
    tolerance and to preserve places of worship belonging to Jews and
    Christians," Namik Tan, Turkey's ambassador to Washington, said in
    a statement.

    The measure enjoyed support from both major US parties. But
    Representative Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican from California who
    eventually voted for the text, questioned why the House zeroed in
    on Turkey.

    In comments that angered some colleagues, Rohrabacher said that Turkey
    had a better record than most Muslim-majority countries and suggested
    that fellow lawmakers were acting to please constituents of Greek or
    Armenian heritage.

    "We have a terrible double standard when it comes to Turkey. Yes,
    they have legitimate concerns, but that doesn't mean we have to be
    inconsistent, singling them out," Rohrabacher said.

    The House Foreign Affairs Committee last year voted to describe the
    1915-1917 mass killings of Armenians as "genocide," leading Turkey
    to withdraw its ambassador temporarily.

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