Reps. Pallone And Radanovich Rally Colleagues In Support OfPro-Armen

REPS. PALLONE AND RADANOVICH RALLY COLLEAGUES IN SUPPORT OF PRO-ARMENIAN PROVISIONS IN FOREIGN AID BILL

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 13 2006

WASHINGTON, MARCH 13, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Congressmen
Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and George Radanovich (R-CA) called on their
U.S. House colleagues to join them in cosigning a letter calling on
the leadership of the House Foreign Operations Subcommittee to support
pro-Armenian provisions in the fiscal year 2007 foreign aid bill,
reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA). This
bipartisan expression of support, addressed to the panel’s Chairman
Jim Kolbe (R-AZ) and Ranking Member Nita Lowey (D-NY), strengthens
the hand of pro-Armenian members of the Subcommittee, most notably
Armenian Caucus Co-Chairman Joe Knollenberg, Steve Rothman (D-NJ),
Mark Kirk (R-IL), and John Sweeney (R-NY). Rep. Sweeney, who joined
the panel last year, is one of only two Members of Congress of
Armenian heritage. The letter notes that members of Congress are
“deeply troubled” that the Administration’s request for military aid
for Azerbaijan is considerably higher then the request for Armenia. By
signing the letter, legislators will add their voice to the effort to
ensure that the agreement struck in 2001 between the White House and
Congress to keep aid levels to these two countries equal is fully
respected. In addition, the letter calls for a hard earmark of at
least $75 million for Armenia, a one-year $5 million allocation for
Nagorno Karabagh, and the preservation of Section 907 of the Freedom
Support Act. “We want to thank Congressmen Radanovich and Pallone in
urging the Foreign Operations Subcommittee to support provisions in the
fiscal year 2007 foreign aid bill of special importance to Armenian
Americans,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We also
value the advocacy for pro-Armenian issues from within this panel
by Armenian Caucus Co-Chairman Joe Knollenberg, the leadership of
Chairman Jim Kolbe and Ranking Democrat Nita Lowey, and the support of
Representatives Steve Rothman, John Sweeney, Mark Kirk, Jesse Jackson,
Jr., Carolyn Kilpatrick, Chaka Fattah, and our other friends.”

Vartan Oskanian: “Armenia Has Already Made Its Part Of Compromise”

VARTAN OSKANIAN: “ARMENIA HAS ALREADY MADE ITS PART OF COMPROMISE”

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 13 2006

YEREVAN, MARCH 13, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. “The most pivot
problem today is the issue of the right to self-determination of the
Artsakh people.

This has already become irrevocable: Azerbaijan will touch upon that
issue, no means, it wants or doesn’t,” Foreign Minister of Armenia
Vartan Oskanian stated in the March 10 interview to the “Shant”
TV company. According to him, Azerbaijani’s “being maximal” will be
decided just within the framework of discussing the self-determination
issue.” Thus, if Azerbaijan doesn’t yeild in that issue, then this
means that this country still remains on its maximalistic position
which won’t bring to the problem solution. From its side, Armenia has
already made its part of the compromise. I don’t even know how our
people will accept that,” the Minister emphasized. According to him,
the general interests, prospects of development of the country as
well as problems of the regional peace must be taken into account in
this case. “I think that the one that is put on the negotiation table
and to what we gave an agreement, is a bordering state for us, far of
what Armenia has really no place to go. Azerbaijan hasn’t come up to
this bordering line yet. So, today many things depend on Azerbaijan,”
Vartan Oskanian stated. According to him, today Azerbaijan must be able
to make its part of compromises. He accused the President of Azerbaijan
of making warlike statements and mentioned that this doesn’t support
creation of a peaceful atmosphere and the problem settlement. “It’s
right, we can suppose that similar statements are addressed to their
society but we must also accept those statements by their value. And
if we made sure that Azerbaijan is serious in its statements, I think,
we must change our defensive strategy and create possibilities to
always keep Azerbaijan in a defensive state. As we can’t wait for when
Azerbaijan will become strong and when it will attack,” the Minister
emphasized. According to Vartan Oskanian, first of all Azerbaijan
isn’t ready for the war. If they aren’t able to risk and solve the
issue in the way of compromise, then they will never take the risk to
solve the issue in the way of war. “The Azeris have much to get in
the way of negotiations, and they’ll give what they know well that
they have lost. Factually, they are in the role of the one to get,
and in the case of the war Azerbaijan may have much more losses,”
the Foreign Minister of Armenia stated.

Chairman Of Heritage Party Applies To Prosecutor General And Police

CHAIRMAN OF HERITAGE PARTY APPLIES TO PROSECUTOR GENERAL AND POLICE IN CONNECTION WITH CLOSURE OF PARTY OFFICE

Noyan Tapan
Mar 13 2006

YEREVAN, MARCH 13, NOYAN TAPAN. The closure of the central office
of the Zharangutyun (Heritage) Party has resulted in an actual
suspension of the party’s activities. This is stated in an application
filed by Chairman of the Heritage Party Raffi Hovannisian to the RA
Prosecutor General Aghvan Hovsepian and the Chief of the RA Police Hayk
Harutyunian. “The archives, stamp of the party and all the documents
necessary for its normal activity, as well as some personal and family
items are in the office. So I am applying to you with a request to
consider this as a statement about an action with characteristics
of a crime, give the appropriate assessment of what has happened,
find those guilty and hold them responsible,” a press release of
R. Hovannisian says.

According to the party, on March 9 Raffi Hovhannisian had a talk
about this issue with the Armenian Prime Minister, who promised to
settle the issue of the office closure as soon as possible under his
personal supervuision.

The following day – March 10, Raffi Hovhannisian proposed in writing
that the Director of the State Musical Comedy Theatre after Hakob
Paronian to lift immediately “the illegal ban on the right to enter
his own work place” – prior to the Prime Minister’s decree, but there
has been no response so far.

Armenian SCUDs Threaten Azeri Oil Sites

ARMENIAN SCUDS THREATEN AZERI OIL SITES

United Press International, USA
March 13 2006

BAKU, Azerbaijan, March 13 (UPI) — Since the collapse of communism
in 1991, Azerbaijan has moved closer to NATO and the United States
as its oil exports have soared.

Azerbaijan is a member of NATO’s Partnership for Peace affiliate
program and has hopes of joining the alliance.

Austrian Eutema Technologie Management GmbH EMTECH project manager
Martin Marek says that Azerbaijan’s main adversary, Armenia, has
deployed Soviet-era Scud-B ballistic missiles in the disputed Upper
Karabakh region, which are capable of striking Baku’s oil facilities.

On March 13, AssA-Irada news agency quoted Marek as saying, “The
Scud-B missiles are aimed at oil fields, pipelines and refineries in
Azerbaijan, which could bring about a disaster.”

On Aug. 23, 1997, the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs
quoted Science Applications International Corp. Strategic Assessment
Center analyst Glen E. Howard as saying that Russia had shipped
Armenia as many as 32 Scud-B ballistic missiles and eight launchers
as part of a Russian 1994-1996 arms deal worth $1 billion.

In May-June 1996, Armenian personnel were trained to operate Scud-Bs at
Russia’s Kapustin Yar firing range. Scud-Bs have a range of 200 miles.

Marek observed that Western investment in Azerbaijan reinforces the
current “de-facto independent status of Upper Karabakh,” and that
“Baku is also aware that if the war resumes, these companies will
freeze their investments in the country.”

ADA To Involve Diasporan Businessmen In Armenia’s Economic Developme

ADA TO INVOLVE DIASPORAN BUSINESSMEN IN ARMENIA’S ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 13 2006

YEREVAN, March 13. /ARKA/. The Armenian Development Agency (ADA)
intends to involve diasporan businessmen in Armenia’s economic
development, ADA Director General Vahan Movsisyan told a press
conference.

According to him, Armenia has a great potential abroad – about 6mln
people or 1.5mln Armenian families – which can ensure the local
economy’s rapid development.

“However, we are not using this potential to the full measure,”
Movsisyan said. According to him, surveys conducted by ADA revealed
about 300-400 diasporan businessmen that had no relations with
Armenia. “We must not expect investors to wish to come to our market.

We ourselves must encourage them, arouse their interest in investing
capital in Armenia’s economy,” Movsisyan said.

According to him, an ADA-held propaganda campaign resulted in the
formation of a trading network that united interested Armenian
businessmen. Movsisyan pointed out that ADA’s policy caused Canada
and Iran-based Armenian businessmen to come to Armenia.

Argentina-based Armenian businessmen are also expected to launch
activities here, and contacts are being established with US-based
Armenian businessmen as well.

“We plan to organize a business forum for businessmen in Yerevan in
June,” Movsisyan said.

He said that ADA attracts not only individual businessmen, but also
large companies, such as Microsoft, Ericsson, Sonix.

Armenian Trade Minister For Efforts Toward Stable Economic Developme

ARMENIAN TRADE MINISTER FOR EFFORTS TOWARD STABLE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 13 2006

YEREVAN, March 13. /ARKA/. The efforts being made in Armenia’s
economic sector must be aimed at ensuring the country’s stable
economic development, RA Minister of Trade and Economic Development
Karen Chshmarityan stated at his meeting with the IMF Resident
Representative to Armenia James McHugh and IMF executives.

“There is a necessity of directing efforts in the economic sector to
ensure Armenia’s stable economic development,” Chshmarityan said,
briefing the IMF representatives on the economic reforms being
implemented in Armenia.

For these goals to be achieved, the sides pointed out the necessity
of a number of reforms, particularly, the improvement of the customs
and tax environment, development of the banking system as a financial
instrument of business promotion, as well as struggle against shadow
economy.

The sides also discussed the current state of Armenia’s economic
development, process of cooperation and future plans.

For further cooperation to be better organized, Mr McHugh asked the
Minister to present the main tasks of Armenia’s economic strategy.

Aghasi Aivazian’S 80th Anniversary Celebrated

AGHASI AIVAZIAN’S 80TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 17 2005

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 17, NOYAN TAPAN. The 80th anniversary of Aghasi
Aivazian, a prose-writer, script-writer and director, was celebrated
at the Yerevan Cinema House on October 14. Officials, artists were
present at the ceremony.

Aghasi Aivazian entered the literary field in 1960 and became one
of classics of the Armenian literature by his original works and
particular way of thinking, prose-writer Perch Seytuntsian mentioned.

“The writer’s life and work may be characterized as a great love
towards life and living, fighting and creating, towards his people,
Fatherland and culture,” Perch Zeytuntsian said.

Aghasi Aivazian is an author of numerous books, scripts. The
“Triangle,” “Lighted up Lantern” and other films were shot at the
“Hayfilm” movie studio by his sripts. The last film on Aghasi
Aivazian’s scenario remains the film “Secret Advisor” shot in 1988.

“At present there are interesting ideas, ready works which can become
good films,” Aghasi Aivazian mentioned. He informed that he’s going to
publish a new book where works of last few months will be included in.

Aghasi Aivazian wrote a number of plays which were staged at theaters
of different cities of Armenia, and “Aralez” was staged just by the
author himself.

RA President Robert Kocharian, Prime Minister Andranik Margarian
sent messages of congratulation on the occasion of Aghasi Aivazian’s
jubilee. During the event, pieces from films on A.Aivazian’s scenarios
were presented as well as parts extracts from his works were read.

Monument Dedicated To Memory Of Victims Of Armenian Genocide To BeEr

MONUMENT DEDICATED TO MEMORY OF VICTIMS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO BE ERECTED IN FRESNO

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 17 2005

FRESNO, OCTOBER 17, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Fresno Mayor Alan
Autry announced this week his commitment to build a monument in the
near future dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Armenian
Genocide. The announcement was made on October 10, in Fresno City Hall,
during the meeting with His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great
House of Cilicia. In addition to the Pontiff, present were a large
group of representatives of the Fresno Armenian American community.

According to the Information Department of the Catholicosate of
Cilicia, in City Hall, His Holiness conducted an opening prayer during
a city council session. During the council session, Mayor Alan Autry
offered His Holiness the symbolic key to the city. Upon receiving the
key, His Holiness commented that “my hope is that this key will also
unlock the hearts of all the various cultures so that we may share
and work together to build stronger and closer communities living
together in peaceful coexistence.” The Pontiff said that the United
States is the leading example of the possibility of this reality.

The Catholicos had a very busy schedule in Fresno that included
visits with the students, administration and parents of the Armenian
Community School of Fresno on October 11 where the Pontiff stressed
the critical role that Armenian schools play in preserving our culture
and identity as well as imparting our traditions and values.

His Holiness attended a reception and gave a speech at Fresno Pacific
University that also received media attention by local TV stations and
the Fresno Bee. The speech focused on the diversity of cultures that
coexist in the United States as a model. His Holiness also brought
forth the example of intolerance and how that manifested itself in the
Armenian Genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Turkish government. Since
the U.S. has always stood for tolerance, human rights and justice,
he emphasized, “The U.S. Congress must recognize the Armenian Genocide
and thereby demand justice for this crime against humanity.”

In his speech His Holiness discussed state of Christianity in the
Middle East using the Armenian experience and the Armenian Genocide as
an example of what can happen when the idea of peaceful coexistence
with different cultures and religions is shattered. He also outlined
the dynamic role the church plays in Middle Eastern societies including
politics where it pursues matters of justice, peace and human rights
as well as imparting human and family values.

Plans for erecting a Genocide Monument in Fresno is yet another
step in the road toward justice and proper recognition of the 1915
genocide committed against the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turkish
government. It comes on the heels of several other recent positive
developments on this issue including the passage by the U.S.

Congress’ House International Relations Committee of two resolutions
recognizing the genocide as well as the recent resolution passed by
the European Parliament calling for Turkey to recognize the genocide
prior to being considered for admission into the union.

Justice Needed For Armenian Genocide

JUSTICE NEEDED FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
Mona Karaguozian

The SunDial – Daily Sundial, CA
(California State Univ. at Northridge)
Oct 18 2005

Daily Sundial
October 17, 2005

According to Merriam Webster’s dictionary, the term genocide is
defined as the “deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial,
political or cultural group.”

In April 1915, during World War I, the Ottoman Empire began
systematically annihilating Armenians, by first ridding the
intellectuals, men, elderly, women and then children in the Eastern
Anatolia and Western Armenia region, in what should be known as the
first genocide of the 20th century.

The Turkish government has continuously refused to accept
responsibility for the atrocities that have taken place, and it also
refuses to acknowledge the existence of this “alleged” genocide.

The Turkish government makes claims now that the Armenians who were
killed during that period died as wartime casualties and that many
Turks were killed as well. This is false because only the Armenians
that were living in that region in Turkey were being “relocated”
for safety. Why weren’t the other residents of that region being
relocated? It was a deliberate destruction of a specific group
of people.

Who alleges the massacres of 1.5 million people? How could the
destruction of a substantially large number of people be alleged? The
evidence is in the death toll. There are also photographs, hundreds
of chronicles from American newspapers and documentation depicting
the massacres as they were taking place not to mention countless
horror stories passed down generations.

The issue of the Armenian genocide is less than ten years shy of
being a century- long struggle for recognition. Ninety years might
seem like ages ago, but I, as an American born Armenian, still feel
the effects of the massacres. My grandfather was a survivor of the
genocide. I hold knowledge of eyewitness accounts and experiences of
the genocide that were passed down through him. It pains me to be
a third generation Armenian after the genocide and to see that the
struggle for recognition continues to this day.

There are numerous advocacy groups, such as the Armenian National
Committee of America and the Armenian Assembly that are seeking
justice on behalf of the Armenian people. These activists dedicate
their time and effort to spread awareness of the genocide and to gain
recognition for its occurrence.

In a letter sent to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Oct. 5, ANCA
Chairman Ken Hachikian voiced the profound moral outrage of Armenians
over the Bush administration’s ongoing complicity in Turkey’s campaign
of genocide denial.

Turkey has also been trying to gain admission into the European Union,
yet they continue running into complications. European Union foreign
ministers have attempted to agree on terms for Turkish membership,
but many countries, like Austria, have refused to agree on full
membership. They are only willing to offer Turkey a “privileged
partnership” with the EU until such claims as the Armenian genocide
have been resolved. If the EU is unable to agree on terms with the
Turkish government, there must be a reason. For being just an “alleged”
claim, the Armenian genocide is a substantial cause for concern among
many European countries.

This is not the first attempt by Armenian-Americans to gain a political
voice regarding this issue. Many bills have been presented to Congress,
each of which would have been instrumental toward the fight for
justice, but none have been passed yet.

Instead, all these bills have been shot down. Armenian activists
have also organized many public events, such as marches, protests,
vigils and pickets at the Turkish embassy in Los Angeles as well as
all over the world.

Throughout the years, these activities have gained some local media
exposure. None, however, have had a national effect on legislation.

Many of the local media outlets are familiar with the commemoration
of April 24 due to the heavily concentrated Armenian community Los
Angeles, but the voice is barely heard.

As the years pass the story gets old and people begin to forget. This
is the goal of the denial.

This situation may change with another attempt to pass legislation.

On Sept. 15, after nearly three hours of debate, the House
International Relations Committee, voted overwhelmingly in favor
of two measures calling for proper U.S. recognition of the Armenian
Genocide (H.Res.316 and H.Con.Res.195) and urging Turkey to end its
decades-long denial of this crime against humanity.

The Senate should finish the work started by the House and call
for recognition of the Armenian genocide. Only with the support of
the United Sates will the movement to have the Turkish government
recognize the past crimes of the Ottoman Empire succeed.

Justice needs to be served and not withheld because of politics.

Mona Karaguozian can be reached at [email protected].

ws/display.v/ART/2005/10/17/4353cb4fb78e4

http://sundial.csun.edu/vne

F18News Summary: Kazakhstan; Turkey;

FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway

The right to believe, to worship and witness
The right to change one’s belief or religion
The right to join together and express one’s belief

================================================
14 October 2005
KAZAKHSTAN: CONTINUED STATE HOSTILITY TO INDEPENDENT MUSLIMS AND HARE
KRISHNA DEVOTEES

Kazakhstan continues to try to suppress non-state controlled Muslim
organisations, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. The latest attempt by the
state-controlled Spiritual Administration of Muslims in Kazakhstan (the
Muftiate) to close down the independent Union of Muslims in Kazakhstan
(UMK) is a court case, due to begin on 17 October. The Muftiate claims
that a newspaper interview given by the UMK’s head, Murat Telibekov, cost
the Muftiate the astonishing figure of 10 million tenge [487, 244
Norwegian Kroner, 62,320 Euros, or 74,690 US Dollars]. Hare Krishna
devotees also continue to experience state hostility. The latest
government attempt to close down a Hare Krishna farm on the outskirts of
Almaty is an accusation that the community acquired the land in 1992 using
forged documents. “It is quite evident to us that the head of the
administration is simply carrying out orders from higher up,” the Society
for Krishna Consciousness in Kazakhstan told Forum 18.

12 October 2005
TURKEY: IS THERE RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN TURKEY?

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.
* See full article below. *

12 October 2005
TURKEY: IS THERE RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN TURKEY?

By Dr. Otmar Oehring, head of the human rights office of Missio
<;

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 laïcité 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 vak&#305;flar) 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.

A printer-friendly map of Turkey is available at
<;Rootmap=turkey>

For a personal commentary on religious freedom under Islam, see
< gt;

For a personal commentary assessing western European “headscarf laws,” see
<;.
(END)

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