Kathimerini, Greece
April 11 2005
Second `Turkish’ group is banned
Confirming a previous verdict on the sensitive issue of whether the
Muslim minority of northern Greece can be regarded as an ethnic
group, the country’s highest civil court has ruled against a Thracian
association describing itself as `Turkish.’
Judiciary sources said yesterday that the Supreme Court’s Fourth
Section rejected a bid by the `Cultural Association of Turkish Women
in the Rhodope Prefecture’ against a ruling by a Thrace appeals court
that had ordered the group’s dissolution.
It was the second ruling of its kind by the Supreme Court this year,
after a decision in January banning a 78-year-old Muslim minority
association named the `Turkish Union of Xanthi,’ a Thracian town with
a strong Muslim community.
This verdict, with which Ankara expressed dismay, had said the union
`served the interest of a foreign country in the attempt to present a
Turkish minority as living in Greece.’
Citing the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, which provided for an exchange of
populations between Greece and Turkey following the 1919-22 war,
Athens holds that the 100,000-strong Muslim minority in Thrace is not
ethnically Turkish.
The ruling made public yesterday – which has yet to be officially
announced – noted that the association’s aims were illegal and went
against the Treaty of Lausanne. At the same time, it established that
the lower court’s decision was in accordance with the Greek
Constitution and the European Convention on Human Rights.
According to judicial sources, Supreme Court judges found that the
association `is implicitly seeking to forward Turkish ideals, in
contrast to other lawful associations in Greece – of different ethnic
descent, such as Armenian or Israeli – which legitimately aim to
preserve their national customs, language etc.’