Reply from Athens to Türkiye’s statement over minority schools in Thrace
Greece’s Foreign Ministry has issued a response to Türkiye’s statement regarding the closure of four minority primary schools in the northeastern province of Thrace..
According to kathimerini, Ankara claims constitutes a violation of the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne provisions safeguarding the rights of Muslims in the area.
“Ankara is regrettably once again turning reality on its head in order to put forward positions which are unsubstantiated. We reject them through and through,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexandros Papaioannou said on Saturday.
Papaioannou said that Greek authorities decided to suspend the schools’ operation because they did not meet the minimum required number of nine pupils. He said a total of 29 non-minority primary schools had been closed for failing to meet the same standard.
“Therefore, it cannot be claimed that minority pupils are been subjected to unfair treatment,” he said.
“The educational policy decisions of the Greek state are made on the basis of equity and without discrimination for all Greek citizens, with the exclusive purpose of providing high quality education,” he said.
The spokesman furthermore said that 99 minority primary schools will operate in Thrace in the next academic year. Meanwhile, he said, only three Greek minority schools will operate in Istanbul, one on the northeastern Aegean island of Imvros, while no classes will be held on nearby Tenedos.
“The Muslim minority in Thrace numbers approximately 120,000 people. The Greek minority in Turkey does not exceed 3,000 people, while at the time of the Lausanne Treaty they were the same number. Regrettably for Turkey, the numbers speak their own undeniable truth about who respects and who implements the Lausanne Treaty,” he said.