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ANKARA: Minority Communities Ready For Civilianization

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  • ANKARA: Minority Communities Ready For Civilianization

    MINORITY COMMUNITIES READY FOR CIVILIANIZATION
    Vercihan Ziflioglu

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Aug 29, 2011
    Turkey

    Prime Minister Erdogan's meeting with Turkey's minority leaders brings
    along civilianization demands of Turkey's minority communities. 'Our
    patriarchates are always the decision-making bodies but our communities
    need to be civilianized,' says Bedros Å~^irinoglu, the head of Armenian
    Hospital Foundation

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (C) and his wife Emine Erdogan
    (2L) meet with the representatives of minority community during an
    iftar dinner Sunday evening. DAILY NEWS photo, Hasan ALTINIÅ~^IK

    Lay members of Turkey's minority groups appear set to increase
    their participation in their internal affairs while the communities
    themselves are looking to contribute more to the overall society,
    according to community leaders attending a landmark iftar Sunday with
    the prime minister.

    "Of course, our patriarchates are always the decision-making bodies
    but our communities need to be civilianized," Bedros Å~^irinoglu,
    the head of the Surp Pırgic Armenian Hospital Foundation and a
    leading member of the Armenian community, said during the event,
    which marked the first time Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had
    come together with all 161 minority foundations registered in Turkey
    for a fast-breaking meal. Turkey's recognized minorities include the
    Jews, the Armenians and the Greek Orthodox, although other Christian
    foundations also attended Sunday's event.

    "The heads of foundations will soon become decision-making mechanisms,
    and the patriarchates will be endorsement centers. We are able to see
    the signals of this today," said Simon Ä°Å~_, a lawyer who monitors
    developments and cases related to minority foundations, adding that
    the communities had advanced a long way on the road to civilianization.

    One source speaking on condition of anonymity said it was symbolic
    that it was Laki Vingas, the lay head of an assembly representing all
    minority foundations under the General Directorate of Foundations, who
    took the floor at Istanbul's Archaeology Museum and addressed the prime
    minister during the iftar rather than traditional religious leaders.

    Vingas said the iftar meeting was a result of a mutual decision of
    minority communities. "We want to obtain inter-communal integration
    and in this sense this event, this togetherness is extremely important
    regarding the future."

    In addition to the desire for a greater civilianization of the
    minority communities, many in the groups have expressed a desire to
    have a greater say in the new constitution to be written during the
    present parliamentary term.

    Members of the communities had been buoyed ahead of the iftar by news
    that a decree was published in the Official Gazzette on Saturday night
    recognizing the rights of minorities to the property that was seized
    from them 75 years ago.

    According to the decree, minority communities will be paid
    compensation at market value for the properties that were sold to third
    parties. Minority foundations have 12 months to apply to benefit from
    the new ruling.

    "Now, our community will

    be able to supply its domestic dynamics with self revenues,"
    Å~^irinoglu told the Hurriyet Daily News at the event.

    The decree issued by the Justice and Development Party, or AKP,
    government was very important for the communities, Vingas said, but
    added that some people were arguing that because the Greek population
    in Turkey had decreased,

    the gains from the properties were no longer of use to anyone in
    the community.

    "This is an unnecessary debate; I don't want to start [such an
    argument]. I don't think we are in a position to reject property and
    say, 'Very few of us are left; what do we do with these possessions?'
    I don't think we have a right so say that," he said.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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