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Turkish atheist organisation launches petition calling for babies to no longer be automatically registered as Muslim

A 2010 poll found that 94 per cent of the country said they believed in God, with just one per cent identifying as atheiest 

Rose Troup Buchanan
Monday 09 November 2015 16:46 EST
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Commuters make their way into Istanbul's underground, with the New Mosque in the background
Commuters make their way into Istanbul's underground, with the New Mosque in the background (Getty Images)

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A Turkish atheist organisation has launched a petition calling for babies to no longer be registered as Muslim at birth.

The Atheist Association – which claims to the first of its kind in Turkey – hopes to get 5,000 signatures to also call on the government to remove the religious affiliation category on national identity cards, the Middle East Eye reports.

It is hoped the petition will draw attention to, and eventually help to end, what the group feels is widespread discrimination against atheists in the country.

“We want politicians to restrain themselves when tempted to make discriminatory statements starting with ‘even the atheists,” the petition read.

“We want equal treatment before the law. We do not want to be treated as though we have ‘insulted religious values’ when we express our faithlessness,” it continued.

The group was founded in Istanbul’s Asian-side district of Kadıköy in April 2014 but just three weeks after its creation was forced to install a panic button to nearby police station after they received death threats, turkish newspaper the Hurriyet Daily News reported.

Index Mundi found last year 99 per cent identified as Sunni Muslim, with just 0.2 per cent identifying as either Christian, Jewish or ‘other’ – although some dispute this assessment.

In 2010, a Eurobarometer poll found 94 per cent of Turks said they believed in God, while just one per cent did not.

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