Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05ISTANBUL2180
2005-12-28 13:27:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Istanbul
Cable title:  

FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND MINORITY PROPERTY ISSUES

Tags:  PGOV TU PHUM 
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UNCLAS ISTANBUL 002180 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

DEPARTMENT FOR EUR/SE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV TU PHUM
SUBJECT: FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND MINORITY PROPERTY ISSUES
MEET: CIVIL SOCIETY KEEPS UP THE FULLCOURT PRESS

REF: A. ANKARA 7242

B. ISTANBUL 1579

C. ISTANBUL 1780

D. 04 ISTANBUL 868

E. ANKARA 3887

UNCLAS ISTANBUL 002180

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

DEPARTMENT FOR EUR/SE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV TU PHUM
SUBJECT: FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AND MINORITY PROPERTY ISSUES
MEET: CIVIL SOCIETY KEEPS UP THE FULLCOURT PRESS

REF: A. ANKARA 7242

B. ISTANBUL 1579

C. ISTANBUL 1780

D. 04 ISTANBUL 868

E. ANKARA 3887


1. (SBU) Summary and Comment: "The genius of democracy is
in freedom of expression; those without this are hunters and
gatherers." Thus Can Paker, Chair of TESEV (Istanbul's
preeminent thinktank) opened a December 10 conference on
Turkey's Minority Rights Question, underlining Turkish civil
society actors' commitment to continue testing the limits of
freedom of expression in Turkey. While the conference was
overshadowed at the time by the press surrounding the Pamuk
case, it was a noteworthy contribution to the chorus of civil
society actors pressing for freedom of speech. It also kept
the spotlight on just how little progress the GOT has made in
addressing minority communities' pressing concerns,
especially outstanding property issues. End Summary and
Comment.


2. (SBU) Defiant in the face of charges: Arriving at the
conference alongside former High Court of Appeals (Yargitay)
President Sami Selcuk was Ankara University Professor Baskin
Oran, who last month was charged under two articles of the
Turkish Penal Code for his role as one of the principal
authors of a 2004 report on minorities in Turkey (ref A).
Addressing the gathering, Oran drove home a number of the
same points which resulted in criminal charges against him
last month. He said the official definition of "nation" in
Turkey referred to secular, Muslim, Hanefite, Sunnite and
Turkish elements of the society, and that the current public
discourse was about deciding what to do with those who cannot
call themselves "Turks."


3. (SBU) "Extremely disconcerting" cases: Sami Selcuk
followed Oran, with a passionate speech defending basic
democratic values: a democrat is one who sees the "other" as
his equal, he said, asserting that the opposite of this is
fascism. Calling some of the cases currently before the
courts "extremely disconcerting," Selcuk argued that despite
laws on the books limiting freedom of expression, judges
should interpret those laws in line with contemporary values,
demonstrating that they are not only competent, but wise.


4. (SBU) Familiar voices: Dilek Guven of Germany's Bochum
University (ref B) and Agos Publisher Hrant Dink (ref C) were
among the now familiar faces linking government policies to
the nationalization of capital, the anti-Greek riots of
September, 1955, and the exclusion of information about
minority groups' cultures and faiths in national textbooks.
An interesting addition to the program was Professor Herkul
Millas from Athens University, who gave examples of
discrimination in Greece, noting that Turkey was not the only
country in which such problems were seen.


5. (SBU) Plus ca change: Many of the conference
presentations were similar to those made last June 2004 at a
TESEV conference on minority property rights (ref D).
Eighteen months later, little -- if any -- movement has
occurred in this realm. The Foundations Law, submitted to
Parliament last summer, was criticized by EU Enlargement
Commissioner Olli Rehn (ref E) and still languishes in
committee. Moreover, only 26 percent of the applications (as
allowed by 2002 reforms) by minority foundations to recover
property seized by the government have been granted,
according to Baskin Oran.
JONES