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Turkey mulls more freedom for religious minorities

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Published 18 August 2009

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan promised democratic reforms in a rare meeting with Turkey's religious leaders, highlighting the issue of minority rights, a key stumbling block in the country’s EU membership bid.

Greek Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and leaders of the small Armenian, Jewish, Syriac Orthodox and Syriac Catholic communities had lunch with Erdogan and senior ministers on Buyukada island near Istanbul on 15 August, a patriarchate official told Reuters on condition his name not be used. 

The lunch meeting coincided with government reform moves to address decades-old tensions with the country's 12 million Kurds. Erdogan, a devout Muslim whose government is viewed with suspicion by some for its Islamist roots, alluded in his speech to a broader reform process. 

"It is now for us essential to embrace all 71.5 million of this nation's people in respect and love," he said, repeating his opposition to ethnic nationalism and saying his government kept an equal distance to all faiths. 

"Are there shortcomings in implementation? There are. We will overcome these together in this struggle. I believe this democratic initiative will change many things in this country," he said in comments reported by broadcaster CNN Turk and confirmed by patriarchate official. 

"Very friendly meeting" 

Erdogan and Bartholomew, the Istanbul-based spiritual leader of the world's 250 million Orthodox, later toured the Aya Yorgi Church, where they had a private conversation in which the patriarch voiced his community's concerns, the official said. The two men last met in 2006. 

Erdogan and Bartholomew also visited a former orphanage on Buyukada that the Turkish state seized from a Greek Orthodox foundation a decade ago. The European Court of Human Rights ruled last year Turkey had wrongly confiscated the property, but the government has yet to implement that ruling. 

Bartholomew also raised the issue of the closed Orthodox seminary on the nearby island of Heybeli, or Halki in Greek, but Erdogan made no statement on the issue, the official said. "We believe the prime minister is looking for a way to open the school. There is movement on this," the official said. "It was a very positive, very friendly meeting." Turkey signalled last month the seminary may open after pressure from the EU and U.S. President Barack Obama, who has called for its restoration during a visit to Turkey in April. 

The EU has made re-opening the Halki seminary a litmus test of the government's commitment to religious freedom for non-Muslims in largely Muslim but officially secular Turkey. 

Turkey closed the Halki seminary in 1971 during a period of tension with Greece over Cyprus and a crackdown on religious education that also included Islamist schools. About 2,500 ethnic Greeks remain in Turkey, as well as approximately 60,000 Armenians, 20,000 Jews and 10,000 Syriacs. 

The meeting with the minority leaders was organised by Turkey's chief EU negotiator Egemen Bagis, who was in attendance with the other ministers. 

(EurActiv with Reuters) 

Background: 

EU-Turkey relations have a long history. Turkey applied for associate membership of the then European Economic Community almost fifty years ago, in September 1959. It applied for full EU membership in April 1987. In 1999, it was recognised as a candidate country with a number of mainly Eastern European countries which in the meantime have joined the Union, in 2004 and 2007. 

The EU agreed in 2005 to start accession talks with Turkey, but only 10 of the 35 negotiating chapters have been opened so far. Talks were frozen in eight chapters in 2006 after Turkey refused to open its ports and airports to vessels and aircraft from EU member Cyprus. Turkey has occupied the northern Cyprus since 1974, when the Turkish military invaded the northern part of the island in response to a coup inspired by the military junta in Athens. 

Recent EU reports criticize the Turkish government, led by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on human rights in fields such as the freedom of expression, the freedom of press, freedom and respect of different religious communities, as well as the need to find a lasting settlement of the Kurdish issue. 

Brussels is asking Erdogan's government to resume work on a new civilian constitution, which would place human rights and fundamental freedoms at its core (EurActiv 28/11/08). 

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