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ANKARA: Will Minority Newspapers Survive?

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  • ANKARA: Will Minority Newspapers Survive?

    WILL MINORITY NEWSPAPERS SURVIVE?
    ORHAN KEMAL CENGÄ°Z

    Today's Zaman
    Aug 23, 2011
    Turkey

    According to London-based Minority Rights Group's estimates,* there are
    around 23,000 Jews, 3,000 Greeks, 60,000 Armenians and 15,000 Assyrians
    living in Turkey today. In total their number is around 100,000.

    How we have reached this point when once 25 percent of the total
    population was non-Muslim in Turkey is of course a very long story.

    Some perished in massacres. Some were deported in population
    exchanges. Some left the country voluntarily. But the end result is
    very dramatic. Their number is less than 1 percent now. The last
    wave of migration happened after Hrant Dink was murdered in 2007;
    many young members of minority groups left Turkey hoping to have
    better lives in other countries.

    As I tried to explain a couple of times in this column before, the
    Turkish Republic applied a rigorous fait accompli strategy against non
    Muslims in which it pushed these vulnerable groups to the corner from
    every possible angel. Non-Muslims were subjected to pogroms and heavy
    taxes, their properties were taken from them, and their institutions
    were denied legal personality and protection; all with the aim of
    getting rid of those remaining from these groups in this country.

    When the Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power in 2002,
    this fait accompli strategy ended, "but the rights period" started.

    The government provided non-Muslims some rights, but all these
    rights have some limitations. For example, the government allowed
    non-Muslims to use their historic churches in different parts of the
    country; however, this permission was only given for one single day
    a year. The government has restored some churches, but it did not
    return them to their historic owners; instead it recognized them
    "as museums" or something else. The government changed the law of
    foundations to allow non-Muslim communities to gain new properties,
    but it could not solve their problem of returning the old properties
    that had been taken from them before. Halki Theological School is
    still closed. The government still interferes with the election of
    religious leaders of non-Muslims groups; the latest example happened
    in the Armenian patriarchate election process.

    In short, this government has improved the situation of non-Muslims
    but did not give them some rights that would change these vulnerable
    groups' situations irreversibly and dramatically. For example, opening
    the Halki School would be a step like that, which would give a kiss
    of life to the Ecumenical Patriarchate, which is on the verge of
    total extinction.

    However, this Tuesday the government took a small but meaningful step
    that filled me with hope for the future of non-Muslims in Turkey. The
    Press Advertising Association (PAA), a governmental agency, has
    decided to allocate TL 250,000 (approximately 120,000 pounds) to six
    minority newspapers belonging to a handful of Armenian, Jewish and
    Greek communities in Turkey.

    The financial difficulties of minority newspapers had been on the
    agenda of the PAA since news had spread that the Greek newspaper
    Apoyevmatini (86 years old) was going to shut down. The PAA has decided
    to give this financial aid to these minority newspapers every year,
    and the money will be provided from the Fund for Various Tasks of
    this agency.

    Along with the Greek Apoyevmatini, another Greek newspaper Iho,
    Armenian newspapers Jamanak, Marmara and Agos and Jewish newspaper
    Salom will benefit from this annual government financial aid.

    This is a small but quite meaningful development because there has been
    no such example in our history in which state institutions supported
    non-Muslims directly. It is quite significant because it aims to
    support the foundation of these non-Muslim groups by supporting their
    cultural life. I hope that this aid will help to ease the financial
    difficulties of these newspapers, whose buyers have been in a steady
    decline as the number of non-Muslims has been ever shrinking. I also
    hope that this symbolic step will be followed by some other steps
    that will make life easier for our handful of minorities. Let's see
    what the future will bring for non-Muslims in Turkey.

    *"A Quest for Equality: Minorities in Turkey"

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