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Switzerland Brings More Charges Against Turkish Politician For Denyi

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  • Switzerland Brings More Charges Against Turkish Politician For Denyi

    SWITZERLAND BRINGS MORE CHARGES AGAINST TURKISH POLITICIAN FOR DENYING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    The Associated Press
    09/19/05 12:09 EDT

    BERN, Switzerland (AP) - Swiss authorities brought two further charges
    against a Turkish politician for allegedly breaking Switzerland's
    racial discrimination laws by denying that the killings of Armenians
    around the time of World War I was a genocide, police said Monday.

    Dogu Perincek, the leader of the Turkey's Workers' Party, made the
    remarks Sunday in a speech in central Switzerland, Bern cantonal
    (state) police said in a statement. He then repeated them Monday in
    a news conference in Zurich, and was charged by the city's police,
    spokesman Marco Cortesi said.

    Perincek already had been charged twice by Swiss authorities for two
    previous, similar incidents.

    Denying that the Holocaust or other cases of genocide took place is
    regarded as racial discrimination under Swiss law, and can be punished
    by up to three years in prison and an unspecified fine.

    "Based on the fact that, in the course of his address, Dogu Perincek
    denied the Armenian genocide and expressed prejudices against the
    western world, the Bern cantonal police has put down a complaint
    because of suspicion of racial discrimination," the police statement
    said.

    Perincek will be questioned Tuesday by police in neighboring Vaud
    canton, where he already is under investigation for similar remarks
    made in May, Bern police spokeswoman Anastasia Falkner said.

    Swiss authorities launched a second investigation into Perincek in
    July for making similar remarks in northern Switzerland, and Perincek
    was briefly detained after that speech. Turkey called the Swiss
    ambassador to the Foreign Ministry to protest Perincek's detention
    and investigation.

    Similar disputes have erupted in the past between Turkey and
    Switzerland. In June, a Turkish Cabinet minister postponed a visit
    to Switzerland to protest an investigation of a Turkish historian
    who denied in a separate speech that the killings were genocide.

    In July, Turkey canceled a proposed visit by Swiss Economics Minister
    Joseph Deiss because of "schedule clashes," Deiss's spokesman said.
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