July 24, 2013 - 17:44 AMT
Turkey’s non-Muslim foundations to get some property back

Representatives from non-Muslim foundations have announced that they have received a positive response for only 16 percent of the applications they made for the return of their property seized by the state, Today's Zaman reported.

Recent remarks by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who spoke during an iftar dinner, saying his government has returned property that valued at $2.5 billion to non-Muslims, has brought the issue of property seized from Turkey's minorities back on the nation's agenda.

In 2011, Erdoğan's ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government adopted a decree to return all confiscated immovable property belonging to minority foundations in Turkey.

According to the decree, minority foundations are able to reclaim real property they had declared back in 1936. All real property, cemeteries and fountains will be returned to their rightful owners. Immovable property currently belonging to third parties will also be paid for.

The 1936 Law on Foundations aimed to control non-Muslim foundations by placing them under the guardianship of the Directorate General for Foundations (VGM).

Since 2011, non-Muslim foundations have applied to the VGM demanding the return of 542 properties. However, they have been unable to get back most of their seized property over the past two years.

In remarks to Taraf daily, Laki Vingas, head of the Minorities Foundation, explained: “One hundred and sixteen minority foundations have applied for the return of 542 properties, but only 253 properties have been returned. Applications for the return of 829 seized properties were rejected. No assessment has been made about the situation of 460 properties. With regard to 18 properties, which were acquired by third persons, a decision was made for compensation to be paid,” adding that only 16 percent of the applications have been responded to in the affirmative. According to Vingas, the process concerning the return of seized property of non-Muslims will be concluded within three months and the rate of the return will remain at 25 percent at most.

Şahin Gezer, a member of the real estate commission of the Turkish Armenian Patriarchate, told the daily that he finds the figure cited by Erdoğan exaggerated, adding that if all the seized property of non-Muslim foundations had been returned, it would be about $2.5 billion.

Voicing his disapproval of the slow progress in the return of seized property, Gezer said: “The process is running very slowly. The state knows it better than us what place was ours and what was not. We need to take back the documents from the state which the state wants from us. But, we cannot get these documents from many institutions. What we want is covered-up documents at the end of the day. When we cannot get these documents, our applications are rejected and we cannot prove that that property was ours.”

The Diyarbakır Surp Giragos Armenian Church Foundation is another non-Muslim foundation most of whose applications for the return of seized property were rejected.

Foundation head Vartkes Ergün Ayık said that they applied for the return of 190 properties to the foundation but that only 17 have been given back to them.