- Other problems
For 44 years, around 60,000 Western Thracian Turks and some Dodecanese Turks were deprived of their Greek citizenship under Article 19 of the Greek citizenship code, enacted in 1955.
This article was only applicable to Greek citizens who were not ethnic Greeks. This rendered 60,000 Greek citizens of Turkish ethnicity who traveled or migrated abroad stateless due to the Greek state’s interpretation that they lacked any intention of returning home.
Article 19 was repealed in 1998, but not retroactively, thereby leaving the 60,000 people who had lost their Greek citizenship with no way of regaining it.
Another serious problem is the Greek state blocking the minority’s right to democratic representation.
In 1993, Greece introduced a national election threshold of 3%, applicable to political parties as well as independent candidates, in order to prevent the election of independent lawmakers from the Turkish minority.
As the threshold remains in force, the only way Turkish minority candidates can be elected now is from within other mainstream Greek political parties.
Moreover, outside of the Western Thrace region, Greece lacks a single functioning mosque.
Despite continuing requests by the hundreds of thousands of Muslims living in Athens and Thessalonica, Greece’s most populous cities – largely migrants from other Muslim countries, along with ethnic Turks – they lack even a single functioning mosque.
This situation gives Athens the dubious distinction of being the only European capital with no mosque.
The seemingly endless planning for a mosque in Athens has been under way for several decades.
However, the mosque under construction has yet to be fully inaugurated or utilized for prayers.
Years of failure to complete and open the mosque as well as its awkward location will probably continue to draw criticism from local Muslims for this “mosque with no minarets.”