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Authors Of Turkish Government Report On Minorities Acquitted Of"Inci

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  • Authors Of Turkish Government Report On Minorities Acquitted Of"Inci

    AUTHORS OF TURKISH GOVERNMENT REPORT ON MINORITIES ACQUITTED OF "INCITING HATRED"
    Benjamin Harvey

    AP Worldstream
    May 10, 2006

    A Turkish court ruled on Wednesday that the authors of a
    government-ordered report on minorities were not guilty of "inciting
    hatred and enmity" when they said Turkey should grant more rights to
    Kurds and other minorities.

    Professors Ibrahim Kaboglu and Baskin Orhan faced up to five years in
    prison after their report angered nationalists, who feared recognition
    of minority rights in Turkey could lead to the country being broken
    up along ethnic lines.

    A state prosecutor had demanded that the professors, who both worked
    for the state Human Rights Advisory Council, be punished for their
    remarks deemed "inflammatory."

    The professors' 2004 report urged the government to change its policy
    and recognize Kurds as a distinct minority. Turkey says that all
    Muslims in the country are Turks.

    Until 1991, the Kurdish language was banned and even now broadcasting
    in Kurdish is strictly limited by the government.

    The European Union, which Turkey hopes to join, has demanded that
    Turkey improve its treatment of minorities. The push for enhanced
    rights, especially for Kurds, has faced opposition in a country still
    battling autonomy-seeking Kurdish rebels in its southeast.

    The fight with the rebels, who would like to establish an autonomous
    region in a chunk of Turkey's east, has claimed more than 37,000
    lives in the past two decades.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pledged to improve the
    situation with government investment in the largely poor Kurdish
    southeast.

    But the prime minister angered many Turks earlier this year when he
    traveled to the Kurdish-majority city of Diyarbakir and acknowledged
    that Turkey had made mistakes in the past in dealing with what he
    called its "Kurdish problem."

    There are an estimated 14 million Kurds _ about 20 percent of Turkey's
    population of 71 million _ in Turkey, though exact numbers are
    difficult to come by because the government does not keep statistics
    that classify Kurds as a separate minority.

    Kaboglu and Oran's rights report had also suggested that Turkey give
    equal rights to non-Muslims, who are barred from jobs in the police
    and Foreign Ministry, and from becoming military officers.

    Unlike Kurds, Christians and Jews are recognized as minorities in
    Turkey, but nationalists question the loyalty of non-Muslim Turks,
    particularly those of Greek or Armenian descent.

    Kaboglu, one of the authors of the report, called the case against him,
    "a shame for Turkey."

    The court on Wednesday also dropped charges against the two professors
    for allegedly insulting the judiciary when they criticized the charges
    brought against them. The Anatolia news agency reported that the
    Justice Ministry, already under criticism for prominent freedom of
    expression cases like the one against novelist Orhan Pamuk, refused
    to approve those charges.
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