New alternative service falls flat in Armenia

EurasiaNet, NY
March 10 2006

NEW ALTERNATIVE SERVICE FALLS FLAT IN ARMENIA
Emil Danielyan 3/10/06

Young men refusing to serve in the armed forces for religious reasons
are again being prosecuted in Armenia, despite the introduction
nearly two years ago of a legal alternative to compulsory military
service. Conscientious objectors, mainly Jehovah’s Witnesses, are
refusing to enlist for alternative civilian service on the grounds
that it is controlled by the Armenian military. About 50 of them are
currently in jail or are awaiting trial.

Local and international human rights organizations have long
criticized the authorities in Yerevan for jailing conscientious
objectors. In 2001, the Council of Europe made elimination of the
practice a key condition for admitting Armenia as a member. However,
an Armenian law on alternative service, which came into force in July
2004, has so far failed to address the problem. Council of Europe
officials say it does not fully meet European standards and should be
amended.

The law gave male citizens who refuse mandatory military service two
options: to perform non-combat duties inside army bases for three
years or to spend three and a half years at civilian institutions.
After the law came into force, 22 Jehovah’s Witnesses opted for the
latter option and were assigned to special civilian hospitals,
including Armenia’s largest psychiatric clinic. But they soon
discovered that these facilities are essentially under military
control – regularly checked on by military police officers, confined
to the medical institutions for 24 hours a day and even fed by the
army.

“For young Jehovah’s Witnesses, to be attached to the military in any
form is impossible because that means cooperating with the military,”
said Andre Carbonneau, a Canadian lawyer representing the Jehovah’s
Witnesses in Armenia. That, he added, would run counter to one of the
main tenets of the US-based Christian sect.

That also explains why all 22 men abandoned their places of service
before being arrested in August of last year. Thirteen of the
objectors were tried and controversially sentenced to between two and
three years’ imprisonment under articles of the Armenian Criminal
Code that deal with desertion from military units. The court
sentences occurred before the authorities enacted a legal clause in
January 2006 that declared abandonment of civilian service a crime
punishable by imprisonment.

According to Carbonneau, this constitutes a retroactive enforcement
of the law, illegal under Armenia’s constitution. Acting on the
attorney’s complaint, an Armenian appeals court recently overturned
virtually all of the Jehovah’s Witness convictions by lower courts.
However, it stopped short of ordering the release of the
conscientious objectors, only sending their cases back to
prosecutors. The latter are refusing to set the men free, pending
another trial.

The Jehovah’s Witnesses have responded by lodging an appeal to the
European Court of Human Rights which they hope will order the release
of the men, the only Armenians to date to perform alternative
service. But Carbonneau admitted that there is little they can do
about nearly 30 other Jehovah’s Witnesses, who refused outright to
perform military-controlled civilian duty after the alternative
service law came into force. They are now being kept in pre-trial
detention. “The law on alternative service is not an option for any
conscientious objector,” he said.

Council of Europe bodies monitoring Armenia’s compliance with the
country’s membership obligations appear to share this view. “The
Council of Europe and its monitoring mechanisms consider that the
commitments in this area have not fully been met with the current
legislation,” the head of the Strasbourg-based organization’s Yerevan
office, Bojana Urumova, told EurasiaNet. Urumova said it should be
amended “in a way which will meet European standards and resolve this
issue definitely.” Armenian authorities have to come up with a
“genuine civilian alternative to military service,” she added.

The Armenian government, meanwhile, has drafted amendments to the law
on alternative service that will be debated by parliament later this
year. With government officials refusing to disclose the amendments’
content for the moment, it is not clear whether they will satisfy the
Jehovah’s Witnesses. The Armenian military has always feared that
alternative service could serve as a legal loophole for mass draft
evasion; hence, its desire to strictly regulate the process. In a
December 2004 directive, the chief of the Armenian army staff,
Col.-Gen. Mikael Harutiunian, ordered military officials to regularly
report to him about civilian compliance with regulations that, among
other things, require them to stay in their place of service 24 hours
a day and take leaves of absence only with official permission.

Jehovah’s Witnesses have long been viewed with suspicion by the
authorities and a large part of Armenia’s population, primarily due
to their strong opposition to military service. Many Armenian
politicians and ordinary people alike consider their pacifist
doctrine a serious threat to the national security of a country
locked in a bitter territorial conflict with one of its neighbors,
Azerbaijan. The sect had for years been denied official registration
for that reason.

The government formally legalized it only in October 2004, in a move
that was condemned by the Armenian Apostolic Church. “The activities
of totalitarian religious organizations, including Jehovah’s
Witnesses, run counter to our national and state interests and
aspirations,” the church, to which over 90 percent of Armenians
around the world nominally belong, said in a statement issued at the
time.

In the words of Tigran Harutiunian, a Jehovah’s Witness spokesman in
Armenia, apart from the renewed prosecution of its young male
members, the religious group has faced no government restrictions
since then and currently boasts more than 20,000 Armenian adherents.
“We are happy to be able to freely talk about our faith,” he said.

Editor’s Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
political analyst.

‘Unicomp’ Presents A New Program in Armenia

‘UNICOMP’ PRESENTS A NEW PROGRAM IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, MARCH 10. ARMINFO. The festive opening of ‘A thousand and one
night of Centrino’ program will take place today in Yerevan, reports
the UNICOMP company to ARMINFO.

According to the information received, on the event a portable PC will
be presnted – a lap-top created on the base of the newest binuclear
platform by CMT (Intel Centrino Mobile Technology). The latter is
meant for students, businessmen and other persons traveling. The
platform increases the opportunities of wireless internet connection.

Intel company representatives assure that the new lap-top model has
four main advantages of the previous one: 70% higher capacity, Wi-Fi
wirless internet connection, 28% lower electricity consumption and 30%
lighter weight. The program will last a month, and in its frameworks
the students of Armenian universities will get acquainted with the
Intel Centrino Duo computers, produces by the Armenia Unicom company.

U.S Government Donates Protective Equipment To Help Armenia To Comba

US GOVERNMENT DONATES PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT TO HELP ARMENIA TO COMBAT AVIAN INFLUENZA

Armenpress
Mar 13 2006

YEREVAN, MARCH 13, ARMENPRESS: On March 13, 2006, U.S. Ambassador
John Evans met with Armenian Minister of Agriculture Davit Lokyan
to officially mark the donation of 1,500 set of personal protective
equipment from the United States of America to the government of
Armenia.

The equipment, which includes coveralls, latex gloves, protective
boots, goggles and masks, is designed to be used by individuals
involved in avian influenza surveillance and response efforts. The bulk
of the equipment, 1,125 complete sets, will be given to the Ministry
of Agriculture to support Armenia’s efforts to develop an active
agricultural surveillance program. The remainder of the equipment,
375 complete sets, will be given to the Ministry of Health for use
as needed by laboratory staff and health care workers.

This donation is part of an on-going effort by the United States to
assist the Armenian government in responding to the threat of avian
influenza. The United States has also provided and continues to
provide technical and other types of assistance to support this effort.

Avian influenza is a global threat that does not respect
national boundaries. No country is immune, and every country has
a responsibility to be prepared. The United States government is
actively engaged with foreign partners around the world to combat
this threat. This donation is evidence of our commitment to assist
Armenia in responding to the threat of avian influenza.

Antelias: His Holiness Aram I receives the Christian-Muslim Dialogue

Press Release
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I RECEIVES
THE CHRISTIAN-MUSLIM DIALOGUE COMMITTEE

His Holiness Aram I received the Christian-Muslim dialogue committee
in Antelias on March 9. The committee includes representatives of
Lebanon’s seven main Muslim and Christian communities, including a
representative of the Armenian community, Dr. Jean Salmanian.

The committee visited His Holiness after its meeting with Patriarch
Sfeir in Bekerke. The committee members and His Holiness discussed the
current situation of Lebanon with all its aspects. The committee also
informed His Holiness of the results of its meeting with Patriarch
Sfeir. The members then wanted to know His Holiness’ views on the
problems Lebanon faces currently and the ongoing political dialogue.

His Holiness first welcomed the ongoing dialogue in the parliament as a
positive phenomenon. He emphasized that all issues should be discussed
in full with realistic approaches and by stages. His Holiness pointed
out that it’s not possible to examine all issues with the same tune
and find immediate and final solutions. He said it’s important to
set the priorities of these issues and approach them based on the
collective commitment of keeping Lebanon’s internal unity, sovereignty
and independence strong.

The Pontiff pointed out that there are issues which are complex,
sensitive and related to regional and international developments. He
advised adopting more realistic and calm approaches towards these
issues. His Holiness concluded saying that the Lebanese have attached
great hopes and expectations to this dialogue venture and therefore
they should not be disappointed. He stressed that the preservation
of Lebanon’s unity and full independence should become a persistent
principle for all of us.

His Holiness highlighted the role of the Armenian community in this
context. He expressed his content that the political leadership
of the Armenian community is actively participating in the dialogue
through its three political parties.

The two sides then exchanged views. His Holiness praised the work of
the dialogue committee and advised its members to continue their work
while keeping in touch with all the sides.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates
of the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
Ecumenical activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer
to the web page of the Catholicosate, The
Cilician Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is
located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Guided Graveyard Tour Brings City’S History Back To Like

GUIDED GRAVEYARD TOUR BRINGS CITY’S HISTORY BACK TO LIFE
by Wendy Leung

The Standard, Hong Kong
October 17, 2005

Most of us probably wouldn’t think of spending a day off looking
at graves, but a local historian turned Hong Kong Cemetery in Happy
Valley into a history museum Sunday, attracting dozens of visitors
who came to learn about their city by visiting the dead. Cemeteries
and history are closely related and different cemeteries can tell you
different stories,” said Joseph Ting, the chief curator of Hong Kong
Museum of History, who organized the tour.

Long known as the Colonial Cemetery, the burial ground _ opened by the
British in 1844 _ overlooks Happy Valley Race Track and was the final
resting place for generations of Hong Kong expatriates and prominent
Chinese Christians. Throughout the three-hour walking tour of the lush
green hillside cemetery, Ting told stories about the departed notables
and their impact on Hong Kong in the 19th and 20th centuries. Pausing,
he pointed to a monument engraved: Daniel Richard Caldwell. Died in
1872.” He started working as a court interpreter because he was of
mixed race and was able to speak many languages,” including Malay,
Portuguese, Cantonese and English, Ting explained.

Caldwell became an important figure at a time when corruption and
illegality were facts of life in Hong Kong.

He eventually became chief secretary.

He had many friends who were pirates, and that allowed him to do
many illegal things,” Ting explained. But he was so talented that
the government couldn’t fire him.” Ting then turned to the tomb of
Karl Friederick, a German who died in 1851. This guy was one of the
first Lutheran missionaries to China. He was also the interpreter
at a meeting of the Chinese and British during the Opium Wars,”
Ting explained. Nearby lies chief colonial surgeon William Morrison,
who died after catching a fever and is buried in a large tomb under
an imposing cross.

Fever is a cemetery theme, a disease that killed off many Europeans
who could not cope with the heat and humidity of Hong Kong in the days
before antibiotics and air-conditioning. Happy Valley, Ting says, is a
suitable place for a graveyard, given its early history as a swamp and
breeding ground for mosquitoes long before it was a venue for horse
racing. Sir Kai Ho Kai, one of the most prominent Hong Kong Chinese
of the 19th century, and for whom Kai Tak airport was named, is also
buried here. Ho Kai was the one of the earliest Chinese legislators and
was more than a thinker,” Ting said. He was Dr Sun Yat-sen’s teacher,
and an advocate of a constitutional monarchy in China.” Nearby is an
unmarked monument with no names, its top shorn off. It is the grave
of Yang Chu-yun, an important turn-of-the-century revolutionary and
the first chairman of the Revive China Society, associated with Sun
Yat-sen. He was killed by Ching Dynasty officials,” Ting said. Cutting
the top off the monument, Ting explained, was a way to show that a
person’s life had been cut short.

Beneath a white marble grave lies one of the most famous names in Hong
Kong _ Catchick Paul Chater, a wealthy Armenian trader, for whom Chater
Garden is named and whose first name and last name both grace local
streets. A major landowner, Chater was an early and successful advocate
of harbor reclamation, a legislator and an executive councillor. Ting
next points to the grave of another famous Eurasian.

Ho Tung was the richest land investor in Hong Kong before World
War I and identified himself as a Chinese. He wore a Chinese long
gown everyday,” said Ting. Ho married two mixed-race wives. One
was Margaret Mak, a devout Christian, who is buried next to Ho,”
explained Ting. The other” wife, a Buddhist, is buried in Pok Fu Lam.

The 40 participants of the walking tour consisted of professionals,
retired employees, tour guides, teachers and the plain curious.

We never heard these stories in school,” said Michael Chan, who was
attending the history lesson with his girl friend Kay Lee, who chimed
in: I didn’t know that graves could tell me that much about historical
figures.” Another participant, who was reluctant to give her name,
said graves are one of her favorite subjects. I visit graves whenever
I get the chance,” she said. I have visited graves in Macau, London
and Paris. But I didn’t know that Hong Kong had a colonial cemetery
like this.” The tour, advertised on the Hong Kong Museum of History
Web site, drew so much interest that many who had wanted to join had
to be turned away. Another tour is planned for December 18. Information
is available at: http:/ /

www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/Museum/History/

<< Not Kocharyan But The Coalition Is Guilty>>

“NOT KOCHARYAN BUT THE COALITION IS GUILTY”

A1+
| 18:23:02 | 17-10-2005 | Politics |

“Thanks to the draft Constitution the Presidential-Parliamentary
governing system of the country turns into Parliamentary-Presidential”,
the RA President representative Armen Haroutyunyan says. He considers
it a serious achievement.

Mr. Haroutyunyan claims that we cannot take the constitution of another
country and copy it like the other post-Soviet countries did. “It
does not work”, he said. According to Armen Haroutyunyan the draft
Constitution makes considerable progress in comparison to the present
one. At the same time he does not deny that it could have been better.

Asked the question what hindered its being better Mr. Haroutyunyan
did not answer clearly. He only said that his offers were rejected
not the by President of the country but by the coalition and by the
Parliamentary powers in general.

New Field For Competition

NEW FIELD FOR COMPETITION
Victoria Abrahamyan

A1+
| 15:45:25 | 15-10-2005 | Politics |

Trying not politicize the matter of returning the deposits, Human
Rights Defender Larisa Alaverdyan has the following approach towards
the problem: “If a person deposited money and cannot receive it back,
it is the violation of human rights”, she stated.

In her opinion, the state is obliged not only to return the deposits
but also to reimburse the people the absence of possibility to use
the sums in the course of years. “The matter should be discussed and
brought to the notion of the interested persons”, Larisa Alaverdyan
says.

In her words, the position of the interested party is being
ignored in the issue. “The legislation should say that if the
depositor dies his heirs should exercise the right of receiving the
compensation. Otherwise the state will artificially protract the
settlement of the issue and thus get rid of the problem”, he noted.

The problem of returning the deposits exists in all the post
soviet states and it can be settled only after clarification of
the legislation.

The human rights defender assures she is not aware of the possibilities
the state possesses for returning the deposits. “I must be impartial. I
positively assess the fact that the issue is being discussed. Ignoring
of this matter would be offensive for the people”, she added. To note,
in her opinion, political forces should compete on the issue.

The Armenian Shadow Over Turkey’s Democratisation

THE ARMENIAN SHADOW OVER TURKEY’S DEMOCRATISATION
Gunes Tezcur

Open Democracy, UK
Oct 13 2005

Turkish acceptance of the fate of the Armenians in 1915 would unlock
a society steeped in denial of its own historical experience, says
Gunes Tezcur

“Every society experiences defeat in its own way”, observes Wolfgang
Schivelbusch in his book The Culture of Defeat: On National Mourning,
Trauma and Recovery, “but the varieties of response within vanquished
nations conform to a recognisable set of patterns that recur across
time and national boundaries.”

Turkish responses to the Ottoman defeat in the “great war” of 1914-18
have been idiosyncratic. After all, that ignominious defeat gave
birth to ultimate victory under the nationalist leadership of General
Mustafa Kemal, who succeeded in creating a homeland for the Turks and,
as Kemal Atat&#369;rk, led the country until his death in 1938.

Perhaps as a result, almost ninety years since the greatest debacle
ever to have befallen the Turkish people, a collective amnesia of the
disaster prevails. History textbooks do not even tell young Turkish
citizens that the Ottoman empire was defeated in the war.

Also on the future of Turkey in openDemocracy:

Reinhard Hesse, “Turkish honey under a German moon” (March 2004)

Murat Belge, “Turkey and Europe: why friendship is welcome”
(December 2004)

Fred Halliday, “Turkey and the hypocrisies of Europe” (December 2004)

Fadi Hakura, “Europe and Turkey: the end of the beginning” (October
2005)

If you find this material valuable please consider supporting
openDemocracy by sending us a donation so that we can continue our
work and keep it free for all

For the ultimate surrender of the empire, they blame the failure of
the Germans and the allies; for the loss of the Arab territories,
they perpetuate the myth of an “Arab stab in the back.” This denial of
defeat has been accompanied by a denial of any responsibility for the
fate of the empire’s Armenian subjects. And that tragic fate of the
Armenians still haunts Turkey’s prospects for democratisation today.

Debates on the fate of the Armenians living under the Ottoman empire
have intensified in recent years. Armenian communities in the west have
long been active in publicising the Armenian genocide and in urging
western parliaments and governments to recognise it. On 28 September
2005, the European parliament passed a resolution that calls on Turkey
“to recognise the genocide of the Armenians” and considers this act
as a “prerequisite to accession to the European Union.” Meanwhile,
an Istanbul conference organised by Turkish scholars who challenge
the official Turkish line stirred a major controversy after various
attempts to prevent it from convening it proved futile.

Still, Turkish public opinion remains very sensitive to the claims
that Armenians were deliberately annihilated in a policy of ethnic
cleansing. Not just the Turkish state, but large segments of Turkish
society remain defensive. Dissidents have a hard time swaying public
opinion; they feel compelled to state that they are not “traitors.”

How to make sense of the current state of Turkish public opinion?

What can it tell us about the power of national imaginations vis-a-vis
the past on the future of democracy?

Four elements of denial

The denial of Turkey’s defeat in the first world war translates
into sympathy for the Ottoman rulers who perpetrated the acts of
genocide against the Armenians. Mehmet Talat Pasha, the wartime
grand vizier who ordered the mass deportation of Armenians in 1915,
was assassinated in Berlin by an Armenian survivor, Sogomon Teleyran,
in 1921. His remains were brought to Turkey from Germany in 1943 and
reburied on the “hill of liberty” in Istanbul along with those of
the formidable war minister, Enver Pasha.

Talat, Enver, and their accomplices brought about the demise of six
centuries of empire in pursuit of hollow, grandiose designs; they were
men who sent millions to their deaths with impunity. Yet they still
enjoy the status of heroes in contemporary Turkey. Despite the fact
that the Young Turks lost the war, their crimes are long forgotten
if not forgiven by Turkish nationalists.

There are four reasons why Turkish public opinion cannot swallow the
term “genocide”.

First, Turks do not believe that the “Turkish nation” is capable of
committing such unspeakable atrocities.

Second, the extermination of the Armenians has been shrouded in
the claims of a civil war: “if we killed some of them, they also
killed many of us” is the usual reaction of ordinary Turks. It is
not uncommon for the Turkish media to show newly discovered mass
graves full of Turks killed by Armenian militias in eastern Turkey,
or to publish memoirs of old Turks who witnessed Armenian atrocities.

Turkish public opinion is stirred up by the perception that Armenians
exclusively monopolise the status of victim.

Third, it is an open secret that without the annihilation of Armenians,
Turkey’s eastern borders would look quite different.

Fourth, the extreme politicisation of the issue in the international
arena and western pressure on the Turkish government to recognise
the Armenian genocide have strongly contribute to widespread Turkish
feelings of unfairness, exploitation, and inferiority vis-a-vis the
west. In this connection, the passivity of western governments during
the genocides in Bosnia and Rwanda, to cite the most recent cases,
hardly helps their claims to serve as arbiters of justice.

For all these reasons, discussions of the fate of the Armenians
in contemporary Turkey are largely deprived of moral concerns and
sensitivities.

Also in openDemocracy, Nouritza Matossian’s essay on the Armenian
painter Arshile Gorky, “Disinterring the past” (July 2001):

“The violation of history continues to unhinge the present.”

New past, new future

An unfettered and open discussion of the fate of the Armenians would
lead to greater public awareness of the perils of absolute state
power, as it would buttress democratic and accommodative approaches
to dealing with Kurdish nationalism.

It would be naïve, however, to expect that the emergence of the
Armenian issue as a major factor in negotiations between the European
Union and Turkey would tame the chauvinistic tendencies in Turkish
nationalism. It would more likely play into the hands of isolationists
and ultra-nationalists who insist that Europe is insincere and seeks to
“betray” Turkey over and over again.

How the defeats of the past are articulated in national memory
inevitably affects how nations behave in the conflicts of the
present. Crimes committed in times of national desperation or
decadence can occasion healing only when all of their justifications
are categorically rejected by present generations. Then, the culture
of impunity unravels.

In the case of Turkey, this entails a self-critical and unflinching
examination of its greatest defeat, the first world war, as well
as its subsequent victory in the war of independence of 1919-22. A
more open and ethical understanding of the fate of the Armenians is
absolutely essential for Turkey’s democratic future.

–Boundary_(ID_uHJNcEyEE8TlGxR9bQ6W4g)–

http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-turkey/armenia_2920.jsp

BAKU: Azerbaijan Will Definitely Free Occupied Land -Defense Ministe

AZERBAIJAN WILL DEFINITELY FREE OCCUPIED LAND -DEFENSE MINISTER

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Oct 12 2005

Baku, October 11, AssA-Irada
Azerbaijan is firm on liberating its territories from under Armenian
occupation, Minister for Defense Safar Abiyev has said.

“Armenia is unwilling to withdraw from our land. Azerbaijan will
definitely free its territories”, Abiyev said in a meeting with
Dimitros Panagiotu, deputy chief of staff of NATO’s United Forces
Command in Neapol, on Tuesday.

Abiyev noted that the country has been actively involved in NATO’s
Partnership for Peace program since 1994. Panagiotu’s visit will give
a further impetus to its cooperation with the alliance, he said.

The parties also discussed strengthening Azerbaijan’s integration
into NATO and the military-political situation in the South Caucasus
region.*

TURKEY: Is There Religious Freedom In Turkey?

TURKEY: IS THERE RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN TURKEY?
By Dr. Otmar Oehring, head of the human rights office of Missio

Forum 18, Norway
Oct 12 2005

The European Union (EU) must make full religious freedom for all a
core demand in the EU membership negotiations with Turkey which have
just begun, argues Otmar Oehring of the German Catholic charity Missio

in this personal commentary for Forum 18 News Service
Dr Oehring also calls for people inside and
outside Turkey who believe in religious freedom for all to honestly
and openly raise the continuing obstructions to the religious life of
Turkey’s Muslim, Christian and other religious communities. He analyses
the limited, complex and changing state of religious freedom in the
country. In particular, he notes that Christians of all confessions,
devout Muslim women, Muslim minorities, and other minority religions
face official obstacles in practicing their faith and (in the case
of non-Muslims) strong social hostility.

Go to any mosque or church in Turkey and you will see people
worshipping. So clearly some religious freedom exists. Yet serious
problems persist. Religious communities are not allowed to organise
themselves as they choose. Individual religious freedom exists up to
a point. For example, you are entitled by law to change your religion
and to have the change recorded on your identity documents, but people
who have done so have faced hostility from fellow-citizens. As soon as
a religious community wants to organise itself, problems arise. This
holds just as much for Muslims as for communities of other faiths.

Although many Turks dislike the term “State Islam”, it has to be
stated that Islam is organised by the state. Sunnis who consider
this an unacceptable innovation are not allowed to organise. Although
Sufi orders exist, some even with a vast membership, they have been
officially forbidden banned since the 1920s.

The main problem religious communities identify is their lack of
legal status as religious communities. In the late Ottoman period
some religious minorities had legal status under the millet system,
but the Islamic community had no separate legal status as the state
was considered to be Islamic. But since the founding of the Turkish
republic, any such status has disappeared. Some Muslims are concerned
about this lack of legal status, especially minority Muslim groups
within the dominant Sunni majority, as well as the Alevis, Shias and
the Sufi orders. But few Muslims are prepared to voice their demands
for legal status openly, for fear of imprisonment, although in recent
years the Alevis have become more vocal. This has led to their gaining
some recognition as associations, though not as religious bodies.

Religious meetings and services without authorisation remain illegal,
though it remains unclear in law what constitutes legal and illegal
worship. The Ottoman millet system recognised some religious
minorities and the 1923 Lausanne Treaty spoke vaguely of religious
minority rights without naming them, but the Turkish authorities
interpret this to exclude communities such as the Roman Catholics,
Syriac Orthodox and Lutherans, even though these communities have
found ways to function. Protestant Christian churches functioning
quietly in non-recognised buildings are generally tolerated, but
Muslims gathering outside an approved mosque are viewed as a threat
to the state and police will raid them.

It is not possible for most Protestant Christian churches to be
recognised as churches under current Turkish law. But in one bizarre
case, a German Christian church was recognised in Antalya, but
only by calling itself a “chapel” not a “church.” Most Evangelical
Protestant churches in Turkey do not meet in private homes, but in
rented facilities such as office buildings or other non-residential
buildings. These can be fairly large.

The Law on Associations – adopted by Parliament in October 2004 –
does not allow the founding of associations with a religious purpose,
so founding a religious discussion group or even a religious freedom
group is impossible, even if some religious communities do try to
register as associations. Some Sufi orders and new Islamic movements
have registered as businesses, even with religious names.

However, the government has changed the building planning laws,
replacing the word “mosque” with “place of worship”. The government
indicated to Protestant churches that individuals cannot ask for
buildings to be designated as a place of worship, but individual
congregations should try to get recognition as a legal personality
first (as a “Dernek” or society) and then try to get their meeting
place designated as a place of worship. At least two Protestant
churches are now trying this route.

There are currently two Protestant churches that are legally recognised
by the Turkish state, one of which is in Istanbul. It was recognised
as a “Vakf” (charitable foundation) several years ago, after a
long court battle, making it a legal entity. Several weeks ago,
they finally had their building officially designated as a place of
worship. The second example is the Protestant church in Diyarbakir,
which has legal recognition as a house of worship under the Ministry
of Culture, as a heritage site.

Religious education remains tightly controlled. In law such education
must be carried out by the state, although in practice Christian
churches – Armenian Apostolic, Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant – have
been able to provide catechetical training to their children on church
premises. The state turns a blind eye to this. But Koranic courses are
different. Officially they should take place only under the guidance of
the state, yet some 6,000 such courses are widely spoken of as existing
clandestinely. Many officials and police officers have good contacts
with them, while many senior officials and parliamentarians have been
members of Sufi orders which officially do not exist or are forbidden.

It is generally impossible to found higher education establishments
for Muslims, Christians and others. The Armenian Apostolic and the
Greek Orthodox seminaries were closed down in the 1970s and the
government has resisted all attempts to reopen them. Protestants
cannot normally establish Bible colleges. However, an Evangelical
Bible college functions in Selcuk; it is not government recognised and
accredited, but it has been providing theological training for several
years. Christian clergy and pastors mostly have to train abroad. Alevi
Muslims do not tend to demand religious colleges, as they are led
not by imams but by elders who are initiated by other elders.

The Law on Construction – which came into force into July 2003 –
makes it possible to “establish” places of worship. But the law –
probably deliberately – does not define if this means “build”, “rent”
or “buy”. Protestant churches face problems trying to build. Any
community wishing to build a place of worship officially can do so in
an area with a minimum number of adherents of their faith – but the
state decides if the community has enough members to get the land it
needs. There is no authoritative definition of how the law should
be interpreted. The Justice Minister said recently that religious
communities intending to establish a place of worship should apply, but
how can religious communities apply if officially they cannot exist?

Government officials do not want to acknowledge that Alevi Muslims
cannot officially establish places of worship. The government is
building Sunni mosques in many Alevi villages, but Alevis will not
go to them. Instead they meet openly for worship in cemevis (meeting
houses), not only in central Anatolia but even in Istanbul. The
government stated in parliament in 2004 that such Alevi cemevis are
not to be considered as places of worship. Although many of them
still function unimpeded, some have been closed down in recent years.

Conversion from one faith to another is possible, even from Islam,
under the law on personal status (though you cannot be listed
officially as an atheist or agnostic). If you convert from Islam
you can change your faith on your identity papers, but being Muslim
on your identity card makes day-to-day life easier. Christians,
Baha’is or Jehovah’s Witnesses are often unable to find employment,
especially in rural areas. So many who have converted from Islam
to another faith prefer to leave their religious designation on
their identity papers unchanged. According to information given by
the Minister of State in charge of Religious Affairs this autumn,
during the last ten years fewer than 400 people officially converted
to Christianity and only about 10 to Judaism.

Islam is controlled by the Presidency of Religious Affairs, or
Diyanet , which
is directed from the Prime Minister’s office. This was deliberately
established not as a government ministry, as Turkey claims to be a
secular state. Some Muslims do object to this state control, especially
those from newer groups, such as the Nurcu movement, the Suleymanci,
followers of Fethullah Gulen, and members of Sufi orders.

Some religious communities can officially invite foreign religious
workers. The Catholics can under the 1923 Lausanne Treaty invite
foreign priests up to a certain number, though even then the
government makes this difficult, asking why the Church needs so many
priests when there are so few Catholics. It is more difficult for
Protestant communities, as officially they do not exist as religious
communities. Foreign religious workers who come to Turkey under
some other guise can face problems, if the government finds out
about them. As long as the state does not have to know about their
activity they can function, but as soon as the state is forced to take
official notice of them, they can face problems. The government knows
about most, if not all, Protestant missionaries, because these made a
conscious decision to be open about what they are doing. Occasionally
they experience some problems but – with occasional exceptions –
the government merely monitors what they do, leaving them otherwise
undisturbed.

All religious communities are under state surveillance, with religious
minorities facing the closest scrutiny. Christian leaders know they
are listened in to and their telephones are tapped. The Ecumenical
Patriarch states that “walls have ears,” even when speaking within
his own Patriarchate in the Fener district of Istanbul. Police visit
individual Christian churches to ask who attends, which foreigners
have visited, what they discussed. They are particularly interested
in which Turkish citizens attend.

Are such visits a threat, or do the intelligence agencies just want
to know what is going on? When the police attend Catholic services
in Ankara, they say they are there to protect Christians. From my
conversations with church members, I’m sure this is not true.

When secularism was proclaimed as a guiding state principle in line
with French laïcite it was sincerely meant. Kemal Ataturk and his
followers aimed to crush Islam. Later on, officials understood that
society was not willing to follow this line. Slowly, Islam returned
to schools and other areas of life. Now Turkey is a Sunni Muslim
state. All those whose mother tongue is Turkish and are Sunni
Muslims are considered Turks. Alevis, Kurds, Christians and all
other minorities are not considered Turks – they are considered
as foreigners.

The furore over headscarves – a genuine concern to devout Muslim women
– was exploited as a political issue by Islamist parties, eager to
demonstrate their opposition to the military authorities which had
banned Islamic dress after the 1980 coup. Had there been no headscarf
ban, there would have been no problem. This point was illustrated by
the case of a non-political devout Muslim, Leyla Sahin. She was barred
from wearing a headscarf in Istanbul University in her fifth year
of medical studies and subsequently successfully completed medical
studies at Vienna University in Austria. This disturbing ban – which
de jure bars devout Muslim women from universities – is currently
under consideration by a Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human
Rights (ECHR). (See for more on
this and other ECHR cases.)

In rural Sunni areas women have always worn headscarves – though not
the type seen in Iran or Saudi Arabia – which some women have tried to
wear in towns. In some cases, supporters of the Refah (Welfare) party
and others have paid women to wear such scarves. Even nationalist
politicians say that if women are free to choose whether to wear a
headscarf or not, many who have worn them for political reasons would
no longer wish to do so.

Societal opposition to minorities of all sorts does impact on
religious freedom. Such social pressure is felt most keenly among
the poor. Members of the urban middle class who convert from Islam to
other faiths can freely practise their new faith. In Izmir a Christian
church exists where many young converts of university background
attend unchallenged. But openly converting to and practising a
non-Islamic faith is often impossible in poor neighbourhoods. In former
Armenian-populated areas of Anatolia – where there are also people of
Syriac descent – many families changed their formal identification to
Muslims, but did not convert in reality. Their attempts to practise
Christianity face enormous obstacles unless they move to Istanbul or
even to Ankara. Back in these towns and villages are no Christian
churches, so anyone wanting to meet for Christian worship could be
dragged off to the police or suffer beatings.

One former Interior Minister stated that Christians should only
conduct missionary activity among such people of Christian descent.

He estimated the numbers of such people at between 800,000 and three
million people.

You have to be very courageous to set up a Protestant church in remote
areas, as pastor Ahmet Guvener found in Diyarbakir. Problems can come
from neighbours and from the authorities. Even if not working hand
in hand, neighbours and officials share the same hostility. They
cannot understand why anyone would convert to Christianity. People
are not upset seeing old Christian churches – Syriac Orthodox and
other Christian churches have always existed in Anatolia – but seeing
a new Protestant church, even when housed in a shop or private flat,
arouses hostility.

Officials vary in their attitudes. The Kemalist bureaucracy follows
Ataturk’s secularist line and is against anything religious. There
is a nationalist, chauvinistic wing of officialdom which believes
that anything not Turkish is a threat to be countered. The security
and intelligence services, including the powerful military, are both
Kemalist and nationalist. Anyone considered not to be Turkish and not
Sunni Muslim faces problems. Even Sunni Muslim Kurds are excluded,
while Alevi Kurds are regarded as even worse.

It is very difficult to imagine that in the next decade or so Turkish
society will change to allow full religious freedom. To take one
example, for the change to be conceivable the chauvinistic content of
primary and secondary school education – constant praise of Ataturk,
Turkey and all things Turkish – will have to change. Unless this
happens, it is very hard to imagine Turkey evolving into an open
society that is truly ready to accept European Union (EU) human rights
requirements. One non-religious illustration of the lack of openness
in Turkish society is the near impossibility of free discussion of
the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians and Assyrians in the last years
of the Ottoman empire, along with continued official denial that the
genocide took place.

Christian churches have welcomed the prospect of Turkish EU accession,
often due to their own communities’ experience and hopes.

If negotiations last for more than a few years some improvements
for religious minorities – including Islamic minorities – might
be possible.

Sadly, there appears to be not enough interest among diplomats in
Ankara from EU member states – or in their foreign ministries back
home – in promoting religious freedom in Turkey. The EU has forced the
Turkish government to change the Law on Foundations. This law governs
inter alia community foundations (cemaat vakiflar) that act as the
owners of the real estate of Armenians, Bulgarians, Greeks and Jews,
who are treated by the government as minorities within the meaning
of the Treaty of Lausanne as well as some of the properties of the
Chaldean Catholic, Syrian Catholic and Syrian Orthodox Christians,
who are not treated by the government as minorities within the meaning
of the Treaty of Lausanne. But reforms will have to go much deeper
for Turkey to meet the EU’s stated ‘Copenhagen criteria’ of being “a
stable democracy, respecting human rights, the rule of law, and the
protection of minorities.” The EU must make full religious freedom
for all, including for Muslims, a core demand.

Full religious freedom would bring with it an increase in the
influence of Islam, which some think would endanger the western
orientation of Turkey. Possibly this is the reason that the EU has
not pushed Turkey harder on religious freedom. However, it is unwise
to see the relationship with Turkey through such “war-against-terror
spectacles.” It is vital for the future of Turkey that full religious
freedom be a core demand, so that Turkish democracy can be strengthened
to the point that it can in democratic ways cope with the hostility
of some Islamic groups.

With so little apparent interest in pushing for full religious freedom
from within the EU, local religious communities within Turkey will have
to take the lead. They are starting to challenge the denial of their
rights through the courts. Protestant Christians have been doing this
for almost 10 years, usually with success. The Ecumenical Patriarchate,
however, has failed to regain a former orphanage it ran on an island
near Istanbul through the High Court in Ankara. It is now taking
the case to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg,
to which Turkey is subject as a member of the Council of Europe. I
believe this is the right way for such communities to defend their
rights and others are already following. The Alevi Muslims have told
the government that, if they continue to be denied religious education
in state schools to their children according to their own teaching,
they too will go to the ECHR. Denial of legal status to religious
communities is another possible ECHR case.

The most important thing is to put religious freedom on the agenda
and talk openly of the problems with full knowledge of the nuances
and complexities of the situation.

It is important to challenge Turkey’s restrictions on religious freedom
using Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which
Turkey signed in 1954. This article guarantees “freedom of thought,
conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his
religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with
others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief,
in worship, teaching, practice and observance.”

This should be the basis for all discussion of religious freedom,
not the 1923 Lausanne Treaty, with its highly restrictive approach
to religious freedom.

Turkish religious communities will have to speak more on the importance
of religious freedom to the outside world, though they will have to
be wise in the way they do this. Religious minority leaders are in a
difficult situation: they believe that they have to argue in favour
of negotiations on EU membership, however sceptical they might be
about how ready Turkish society is to make the necessary changes.

Foreign churches and religious communities should be talking to
their own governments, to press them to promote religious freedom in
Turkey. They will have to convince them they are not simply advocating
greater rights for their co-religionists but truly advocate religious
freedom for all in Turkey, including Muslims.

The big question remains: do the Turkish government and people have
the will to allow full religious freedom for all? The Turkish media
speculates that the current government might not be in favour of EU
membership, but is merely using this as a way to introduce domestic
developments to achieve Islamist aims. The suggestion put forward
in the media is that, if democracy develops, the military will be
prevented from mounting a coup and so there will no longer be any
obstacle to Islamist aims.

Whether or not this media speculation reflects reality, all those who
believe in religious freedom in Turkey – both within the country and
abroad – must keep the issue on the domestic and international agenda –
and be honest about the continuing obstructions to religious life of
Turkey’s Muslim, Christian and other religious communities.

(END)

Dr Otmar Oehring, head of the human rights office at Missio
,
a Catholic mission based in the German city of Aachen, contributed
this comment to Forum 18 News Service. Commentaries are personal views
and do not necessarily represent the views of F18News or Forum 18.

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