A/55/280/Add.1
Property and Works since 10 September 1997. The
Armenian Orthodox Church located at Kirikhan is a
foundation and, like all foundations, it is required to
elect an administrative board. Nevertheless, the
foundation in question has not elected a board since
1991, and it has not responded to warnings from the
General Directorate of Foundations. Following
inquiries conducted on the subject, it was found that
the community served by the foundation, which
numbers 11 individuals, is not located in Kirikhan and
the church is not used for worship. The code on
foundations requires that if a foundation has in fact no
beneficiaries, its management must be transferred to
the General Directorate of Foundations (as explained
earlier). If that foundation should succeed in electing
an administrative board within five years, it may
restore its prior status after complying with the
necessary formalities. In Hatay there are 15 other
churches, two synagogues and three Baha’i places of
worship.
51. With respect to the heavy exodus of Christians
from Turkey, it was said that this situation was related
solely to socio-economic factors, in the context of
immigration during the 1970s, and that it involved all
Turks and did not result from any religious intolerance.
It was claimed that any problems raised by members of
minorities were false and were in fact intended to help
them obtain refugee status in Europe.
52. With respect to Orthodox Greeks, it should be
noted that many Greeks left voluntarily during the
population exchanges occasioned by the Treaty of
Lausanne and the Cyprus issue. The Mufti of Istanbul
declared that the treatment of Greeks in Turkey was
linked to that of Muslims in Greece. Finally, the
authorities said that they were proud of the treatment
accorded to Turkey’s non-Muslim minorities.
53. In response to the Special Rapporteur’s question
about the status of minorities other than those
recognized as covered by the Treaty of Lausanne, and
in particular the Assyro-Chaldeans, the Minister of
State for Human Rights declared categorically that
these people had no problems to complain of. With
respect to the arrests of Protestants in November 1999
at Izmir, the Minister of the Interior said that they were
making unauthorized use of premises for religious
purposes, and that the neighbours had complained, but
that the public prosecutor had decided not to press
charges but to issue a warning. In any case, the
Minister of the Interior maintained, this was a simple
12
question of enforcing the law on the creation of places
of worship. With respect to acts of desecration in
Christian cemeteries and places of worship, as well as
attacks against Christians, the Minister of the Interior
qualified these as isolated acts, often motivated by
theft.
54. With respect to the Alawis and the Muslim
brotherhoods, the Minister of State for Human Rights
and the Minister of Justice denied that they were facing
any problem, noting that Turkey was founded on the
principle of a single and indivisible republic and that
no one had the right to call into question the social
order, the Constitution and the principle of secularism.
55. With respect to the general situation regarding
freedom of religion and belief, the Minister of State for
Human Rights declared that Turkey was very proud
and could serve as a model for other nations, and that it
had no need for any lessons in this area, while the
Minister of Justice suggested that his country was the
most tolerant in the world when it came to freedom of
religion.
2. Other authorities
56. The Deputy Mayor of Istanbul felt that there was
no real religious problem in Turkey, particularly for
minorities. He stated categorically that for 30 years no
place of worship in Turkey had been desecrated or
attacked. He maintained that any difficulties affecting
Orthodox Greeks were most likely inspired by the
Cyprus issue, which has set Greece against Turkey. He
hoped that the international community would not
interfere in Turkey’s internal affairs, and that it would
concern itself instead with obvious religious problems
in other countries.
57. The Vice President of the Parliamentary Human
Rights Commission felt that if the brotherhoods and the
Alawis were free to do as they please, the result could
be divisive.
B. Consultations with non-governmental
organizations and independent Turkish
experts
58. While the Turkish authorities stressed the
tolerance that has prevailed in Turkey since the
Ottoman
Empire,
Turkish
non-governmental
representatives (specializing in the area human rights)