
GREEK AMERICAN ORGANIZATIONS' POLICY STATEMENT ON TURKEY'S SUPPRESSION OF HUMAN
RIGHTS WASHINGTON, DC—The American Hellenic Institute founder, Gene Rossides, announced
today that the major Greek American membership organizations approved
the policy statement on "Turkey’s Suppression of Human Rights" prepared by the American Hellenic Institute. These are: the Order of AHEPA,
the Hellenic American National Council, the Cyprus Federation of
America, the Panepirotic Federation of America, the Pan-Macedonian
Association of America and the Evrytanian Association of America,
the American Hellenic Council of California and the American Hellenic
Institute. The approved statement on "Turkey’s Suppression of Human Rights," which is part of the 2004 Greek American Policy Statements, follows:
Turkey’s
Suppression of Human Rights
Turkey’s brutal assaults against its Kurdish minority and its restrictions
on the religious freedom of the Ecumenical Patriarchate reveal that
democratic norms have still not taken root. In view of Turkey’s horrendous
human rights record, U.S. policy toward Turkey should be driven by
forceful incentives for democratic reform. These include an arms
embargo and economic sanctions. We condemn Turkey’s toleration of
assaults against its Greek Orthodox religious minority and continuing
illegal closure of the Greek Orthodox Halki Patriarchal School of
Theology in Istanbul. AHI calls on the U.S. to press Turkey to enforce
strictly the guarantees of religious freedom set forth in the Treaty
of Lausanne, the UN Charter, and other international agreements.
In accordance with U.S. law expressed in Section 2804 of the Fiscal
Year 1999 Appropriations Bill, we urge the U.S. government to use
its influence with the Turkish government to safeguard the Ecumenical
Patriarchate, its personnel, and its property, and to reopen the Halki Patriarchal School of Theology.
Turkey has a notoriously
dismal human rights record, which is well documented in numerous
credible reports. Of special interest is the November 1999 report "Arming Repression: U.S. Arms Sales to Turkey During the Clinton Administration," produced jointly by the World Policy Institute and the Federation of American
Scientists. Other reports by Amnesty International, Human Rights
Watch, and successive State Department Country Reports on Turkey
have stated that "extrajudicial killings, including deaths in detention from excessive use of force,
‘mystery killings,’ and disappearances continued. Torture remained
widespread." Thousands of political prisoners cram Turkish jails. Dozens of journalists have
been assassinated, and many others are in jail.
Abuses against the Kurds
The suppression of human rights by the government of Turkey has been
particularly brutal against Turkey’s twenty- percent Kurdish minority
and amounts to ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity and genocide.
The Kurds have a unique language and traditions. Mostly Sunni Muslims
and numbering 15 plus million in Turkey today, they have been settled
for more than two millennia in a broad arc spanning southeastern
Turkey, northwestern Iran (7 million), and northeastern Iraq (4 million).
They have traditionally resisted subjugation, but history has consistently
denied them a national homeland. They are therefore political and
ethnic minorities wherever they live, the easy target of majorities
casting about for targets to attack and divert attention from domestic
issues. In Turkey, the abuses against Kurds by the government have
been chronic and genocidal.
In the past two decades, the Turkish
military and mercenary groups have killed, either by direct military
intervention or assassination, tens of thousands of Kurds, over ninety percent of whom have been innocent civilians.
It is also well-documented that since 1984, the Turkish military’s
genocidal policy has destroyed over 3,000 Kurdish villages (some
in northern Iraq outside of Turkish territory), creating over 3
million Kurdish refugees. France’s former ambassador to Turkey,
Eric Rouleau,
detailed Turkey’s massive elimination of Kurds between 1984 and
1999:"According to the Turkish Ministry of Justice, in addition to the 35,000 people
killed in military campaigns, 17,500 were assassinated between
1984, when the conflict began, and 1998. An additional 1,000 people
were
reportedly assassinated in the first nine months of 1999. According
to the Turkish press, the authors of these crimes, none of whom
have been arrested, belong to groups of mercenaries working either
directly
or indirectly for the security agencies." (Eric Rouleau, "Turkey’s Dream of Democracy," Foreign Affairs, Nov./Dec. 2000, page 112).
In view of Turkey’s bloody
record, U.S. policy toward Turkey should be driven by forceful
incentives for democratic reform. These include an arms embargo
and economic
sanctions.
For the full text of our policy statements click here.
For additional information, please contact
Angeliki Vassiliou at (202) 785-8430 or at angeliki@ahiworld.org. For general information
on AHI, see our Web site at www.ahiworld.org.
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