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Geneva grills Turk over Armenian genocide remarks

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  • Geneva grills Turk over Armenian genocide remarks

    Monday, July 25, 2005


    Geneva grills Turk over Armenian genocide remarks

    By Agence France Presse (AFP)


    ANKARA: Swiss authorities questioned the leader of a minor left-wing
    Turkish party for saying that the killings of Armenians during World
    War I could not be classified as genocide, the Anatolia news agency
    reported.

    Dogu Perincek, the chairman of the Workers' Party (IP), was briefly
    detained in the Swiss town of Winterthur where he was taking part in
    activities marking the 82nd anniversary of the Lausanne Treaty, the
    founding accord of modern-day Turkey, the agency said.

    He was questioned by the city prosecutor for three-and-a-half hours
    before being released.

    Winterthur police spokesman Werner Benz was quoted by the agency as
    telling reporters that Perincek was questioned for saying "the
    Armenian genocide is an international lie," a remark which was deemed
    to be racist under Swiss law.

    "This assertion contravenes anti-racism norms and constitutes a crime
    under Swiss law," a Zurich police official said.

    Perincek already faces a complaint lodged in mid-July by the
    Swiss-Armenian Association following a speech he gave in May, when he
    said no genocide of Armenians ever took place.

    Two months ago, the Turkish press reported that judicial authorities
    in Winterthur had also launched an investigation against the head of
    the Turkish History Foundation, Yusuf Halacoglu, for rejecting claims
    that Armenians were the victims of genocide by Turks in a conference
    in the Swiss town last year.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in orchestrated
    killings during the final years of the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor
    of Turkey.

    Turkey categorically denies genocide claims and argues that 300,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks were killed in what it says was
    civil strife during World War I when the Armenians, backed by Russia,
    rose up against their Ottoman rulers.

    Much to Ankara's anger, the killings have already been deemed to be
    genocide by a number of countries, including France, Canada and
    Switzerland. -

    AFP
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