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Turkish Human Rights Commission Issues Report on Assyrian Nun, Villages

Turkish Human Rights Commission Issues Report on Assyrian Nun, Villages
By Abdulmesih BarAbraham

2019-11-26 23:21 GMT – AINA NEWS –  St. Dimet Assyrian Monastery in southeast Turkey.Istanbul (AINA) — The Istanbul Branch of the Human Rights Association Commission Against Racism and Discrimination published a report highlighting severe rights violations against the Assyrian Nun Verde Goekmen, who lives alone in the church of St. Dimet in the village Zaz (Turkish IZBIRAK), in the Tur Abdin region in southeast Turkey.

The report is titled Safety Of The Life Of Nun Verde Goekmen In The Village Zaz (Izbirak) — Midyat, Tur Abdin – And The General Social Situation Of The Assyrian Villages In The Region.

Commission members of IHD visited the village of Zaz in July 2017 and in September 2018. During their first trip they also visited nine other Assyrian villages in the region and spoke with the villagers, pastors and mayors, as well as the authorities in charge in the region.

With regards to the situation of the Nun, the commission met with the village mayor Feyzullah Aslan and the Commander of An?tl? Police Station, Senior Sergeant Kadir Altinta?. In addition, they also conducted telephone conversations and correspondence with Isa Acan, president of the Zaz Village Association in Hamburg, Germany.

Ay?e GOEnaysu, member of the IHD’s Commission met with Nun Verde Goekmen three times, and despite the reports she wrote and initiated in the Turkish press about her situation, nothing has changed. In fact, the threats against the nun have increased.

With respect to the Nun’s situation, the commission said:

Nun Verde Goekmen, who lives in the 1500-year-old Mor Dimet Church, has been harassed and threatened for many years. Various methods are being tried to terrify her: Unidentified people come to the church door with vehicles and wait for long hours, sometimes shouting ‘Allahu-Akbar’ while punching the door, sometimes insulting the Nun directly, and on other times, threatening to kill her in case she doesn’t leave the church and the village. All of the complaints the Nun has made to the respective authorities were inconclusive due to the lack of evidence, as no one is willing to testify to these incidents.

Rights violations in the Assyrian villages

The issue of rights violations in the Assyrian villages of Dayro da Slibo (�atal�am), Derkube (Karagoel), Ha? (An?tl?), Der-H?adad (St. Aho Monastery), Bsorino (Haberli), Sare (Sar?k�y) and Kafro (Elbe?endi) in Tur Abdin is almost identical in all of the villages which were visited, by the commission alongside Zaz, says the report. The commission underlines its finding based on interviews with the Assyrian villagers, some of them returnees from Europe, who migrated to various European countries after the evacuation of their villages in the 1990s. They returned in the early 2000s, benefiting from the call of the government to take advantage of the “Return to the Village” law (Kye Dn? Yasas?). Quickly they felt that they are “not particularly welcomed by the Muslim population, especially the Kurdish tribes in power,” in the region, states the report.

According the report:

there have been and are experienced cases of occupation on immovable property such as houses, fields, land, pastures, vineyards and gardens. It is observed that the officials who came for the land registry and cadastral inspection operations were sometimes threatened by armed tribal members, sometimes ‘persuaded’, and that the cadastral transactions were concluded in favor of the occupiers. The lawsuits were delayed, either during the modernization of the land registry records in the same period, or in cases after filing lawsuits where various methods, such as intimidation, threat or accommodation of profit are used in dealing with the officers appointed by the court. Fields and land were passed over to the invaders.

Hostility towards returning Assyrians continues in the region, confirms the report. The commission’s assessment is that the source of this situation derives from the “the Assyrian Genocide in 1915, when Assyrians were separated from their homeland, and that those who tried to claim their history and ancestral lands were subjected to various violations of rights, including threats, harassment and intimidation.”

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