Sadullah Ergin in meeting. Turkey is under EU pressure for expanding rights and freedoms for its non-Muslim community.
The Black Sea coastal province of Trabzon, the name of which has been associated for the last few years with controversial issues, including the killing of an Italian priest, was on Tuesday the venue for a meeting of the Reform Monitoring Group (RİG), which is considered the engine of the reforms carried out in line with Turkey’s European Union membership process.
RİG consists of the justice minister, the foreign minister, the interior minister and the chief negotiator for EU affairs. Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, who was in Tbilisi on an official visit, was expected to join the other members of the group late on Tuesday afternoon, while Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin, Interior Minister Beşir Atalay and Chief EU Negotiator Egemen Bağış, also a state minister, arrived in the city on Monday night.
The three ministers, during their visit to the office of Governor Recep Kızılcık before their meeting in the afternoon, did not disclose agenda of the RİG meeting in detail.
“[RİG] meetings are being held with a minister acting as host. I’m the host for the meeting in Trabzon. We have a wide agenda and a lot of issues [to discuss],” Atalay told reporters, while recalling that RİG had gathered in the southern Anatolian province of Hatay in July.
Trabzon’s name has frequently been uttered with the killing of Italian priest Father Andrea Santoro as well as in the ongoing trial concerning the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink. The 16-year-old who killed Santoro in the Santa Maria Church Feb. 5, 2006 was initially sentenced to life, which was then commuted to 20 years in prison due to the perpetrator’s legal status as a minor.
As for the case concerning Dink; he was shot dead outside the offices of the Agos newspaper in İstanbul on Jan. 19, 2007. The lawyers for Dink’s family had applied to the European Court of Human Rights in 2008 and again in 2009, arguing the Turkish state had not taken precautions to prevent Dink’s murder. They had first appealed to the İstanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office regarding seven policemen, including former Trabzon police intelligence chief Engin Dinç and former counterterrorism team head Yahya Öztürk, claiming that these officers had obstructed justice.
Turkey is under EU pressure for expanding rights and freedoms for its non-Muslim community.
Last month, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan promised democratic reforms in a rare meeting with Turkey’s religious minority leaders, highlighting the issue of minority rights, a key stumbling block in Turkey’s EU membership bid.
Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew and leaders of the small Armenian, Jewish, Syriac Orthodox and Syriac Catholic communities had lunch with Erdoğan and senior ministers on Büyükada, an island near mainland İstanbul. The lunch meeting coincided with government reform moves to address decades-old tensions with the country’s 12 million Kurds. Erdoğan, a devout Muslim whose government is viewed with suspicion by some for its Islamist roots, alluded to a broader reform process in his speech. Yazının ardını oxu »