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  • ISTANBUL: Education Ministry continues to profile non-Muslims after

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 30 2015

    Education Ministry continues to profile non-Muslims after scandal

    January 30, 2015, Friday/ 16:45:40/ TODAY'S ZAMAN / ISTANBUL


    The Education Ministry, whose profiling of non-Muslim citizens based
    on ethnicity was revealed in August 2013, still maintains this
    practice by investigating the ethnic background of non-Muslim
    students, the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos reported on Friday.

    In August, it became evident from an official response from the
    Education Ministry to a query into the background of a non-Muslim
    student that non-Muslim minorities in Turkey were being monitored and
    profiled based on their ethnicity. They were also assigned numbers, a
    practice that dates back to the establishment of the republic.

    The weekly Agos reported on Friday that this practice still continues
    despite the reactions that arose after the revelation of the scandal
    in August.

    According to the report, a 5-year-old boy baptized in an Armenian
    church registered at an Armenian kindergarten at the beginning of the
    2014-2015 academic year. As part of its normal procedure, school
    administrators sent the list of students registered at the school to
    the Education Ministry's provincial branch. However, a statement was
    sent to the school by the provincial education branch requesting that
    school administrators cancel the registration of the boy on the
    grounds that the boy was not Armenian according to an investigation
    into his background. The provincial branch also requested that school
    management inform the parents of the student that they needed to
    cancel the student's registration.

    In a similar incident, another student registered at an Armenian
    school of which his two cousins were graduates. However, the Education
    Ministry blocked the registration of this student for the same reason.
    The ministry instructed school administrators to cancel the student's
    registration. There are several other cases of students facing this
    problem.

    Speaking with the weekly Agos regarding the issue, an official from
    the Education Ministry, who declined to be named due to regulations
    prohibiting public officials from speaking to the press, said: `First
    of all, the demographic information of the students and ethnic origins
    of their parents is researched. If there is no data about their ethnic
    origins, the students are prevented from registering at [non-Muslim]
    schools. Thus, their [the students'] registrations are refused. We
    [the ministry] are looking at the ethnicity of all Armenians, Greeks
    and Jews. We do not have a data bank that shows their ethnicity. We
    ask the General Directorate of Census and Citizenship Affairs.'

    Since 1923, Armenians, Greeks and Jews have been assigned numbers in
    official correspondence between government institutions. A letter sent
    in August 2013 by the Ä°stanbul Directorate of National Education to
    its Å?iÅ?li branch indicates that Armenian citizens are given the number
    two. According to this system of codes based on ethnicity, Greeks are
    given the number one and Jews the number three.

    Non-Muslims react to ministry's long-standing practice

    Garo Paylan, an activist working for an Armenian civil society
    organization and the manager of an Armenian school, slammed the
    ministry's practice, saying that the ministry should stop profiling
    non-Muslims as soon as possible. `There is no legal basis for the
    ministry to determine which students can attend an Armenian school.
    The initiative to determine which students will be registered at the
    [Armenian] schools should be left to the school management. A
    commission established by school administrators or education
    foundations should be able to determine this.'

    There is a law regulating which students can attend a non-Muslim
    school. According to Law No. 5580 on private educational institutions,
    the Education Ministry can determine which students can be registered
    at Greek, Armenian and Jewish schools operating in Turkey.

    Parents preparing to file complaint against ministry

    Parents of the Armenian students whose registrations were cancelled by
    the ministry have been preparing to launch legal proceedings against
    the ministry. Speaking with the weekly Agos, lawyer Cem Halavurt, who
    represents the Armenian parents, said that the ministry's practice is
    completely unlawful. `There is no legal basis for it. It is a racist,
    arbitrary and discriminative practice. The right to education cannot
    be restricted. In an earlier case that we won regarding the same
    issue, the court had clearly stated that this practice is unlawful and
    said the right to education is one of the main fundamental rights that
    should be preserved.'

    The lawyer also said that the ministry refuses to stop the practice
    despite the court's decision and the reactions that arise among the
    non-Muslim communities. Halavurt also emphasized that the schools
    should be granted the right to determine which students can register
    instead of the ministry.

    After Agos revealed the profiling scandal in August 2013, the Interior
    Ministry issued a response to Agos' report on Aug. 2, admitting that
    the `ancestral codes' had been kept since the Ottoman times and said
    they were periodically relayed to the Education Ministry, indicating
    that these records are being actively used today. The ministry claimed
    the codes were only used for `educational purposes,' as Turkey's three
    minority communities -- Jews, Greeks and Armenians -- have the right
    to run their own schools as per the Lausanne Treaty of 1923, a right
    denied to other minority groups such as the Syriacs.

    The response to the scandal has been immense, with community leaders
    and intellectuals condemning the code system. Despite the outrage,
    however, not a single government member made a statement condemning
    the system.


    http://www.todayszaman.com/national_education-ministry-continues-to-profile-non-muslims-after-scandal_371266.html




    From: A. Papazian
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