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Turkey rejects Swiss genocide-denial inquiry

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  • Turkey rejects Swiss genocide-denial inquiry

    SwissInfo
    July 25 2005

    Turkey rejects Swiss genocide-denial inquiry

    swissinfo July 25, 2005 1:44 PM


    Turkey's foreign minister, Abdullah Gül, has criticised Switzerland
    for briefly detaining a Turkish politician on suspicion of violating
    Swiss anti-racism laws.

    Doğu Perinçek, who is leader of Turkey's Workers' Party, has twice
    denied that the killings of Armenians around the time of the First
    World War amounted to genocide. He is the subject of two criminal
    investigations.

    Under Swiss law, any act of denying, belittling or justifying
    genocide is a violation of the country's anti-racism laws.

    "It is not possible for us to accept these things to be done to the
    leader of a political party in Turkey," Gül was quoted in the
    Hürriyet newspaper.

    "Do these actions suit a country like Switzerland?" he asked.

    Questioned

    The public prosecutor of Winterthur questioned Perinçek on Saturday
    for more than two hours after a news conference he gave on Friday in
    Glattbrugg, near Zurich.

    In the speech honouring the 82nd anniversary of the Treaty of
    Lausanne, which fixed the borders of modern-day Turkey, Perinçek
    called claims of genocide against the Armenians an imperialist lie,
    authorities said.

    Perinçek is also under investigation from authorities in canton Vaud
    after a complaint from a Swiss-Armenian Society over a speech he gave
    in Lausanne in May.

    Gül described Saturday's questioning as "unacceptable" and
    "absolutely contrary to the principle of free speech".

    On Sunday, Perinçek repeated his denial of the Armenian genocide at
    celebrations attended by about 2,000 Turks near the Beau-Rivage
    hotel, scene of the treaty negotiations.

    Kurds

    About 300 Kurds, who also marked the anniversary, demonstrated in
    front of the Palais de Rumine where the treaty was signed.

    Speakers criticised the treaty, which had "made a mockery of the hope
    for freedom" of Turkish minorities.

    Armenians say 1.5 million of their people were killed as the Ottoman
    Empire forced them from eastern Turkey between 1915 and 1923. They
    argue that this was a deliberate campaign of genocide by Turkey's
    rulers at that time.

    Turks say the death count is inflated and insist that Armenians were
    killed or displaced as the Ottoman Empire tried to secure its border
    with Russia and stop attacks by Armenian militants.

    Switzerland and Turkey have argued over the issue in the past.

    In June, a Turkish cabinet minister postponed a visit to Switzerland
    to protest against a Swiss investigation of a Turkish historian who
    made a similar speech denying that the mass killings of Armenians in
    the early 1900s amounted to genocide.

    Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey had been scheduled to
    travel to Turkey in 2003, but Ankara withdrew its invitation after
    the parliament of a western Swiss canton recognised the killings of
    Armenians in Turkey as genocide.
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