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  • Swiss Justice Minister's Comments During Visit To Turkey Cause Outcr

    SWISS JUSTICE MINISTER'S COMMENTS DURING VISIT TO TURKEY CAUSE OUTCRY AT HOME

    International Herald Tribune, France
    The Associated Press
    Oct 5 2006

    GENEVA The Swiss justice minister's comments during an official trip
    to Turkey have caused an outcry at home after he appeared to criticize
    the Alpine country's anti-racism laws.

    According to Turkey's state-owned Anatolia news agency, Christoph
    Blocher told his counterpart, Cemil Cicek, on Wednesday that a law
    under which a Turkish historian is being prosecuted in Switzerland
    for saying "the Armenian genocide did not take place" was "a headache."

    Blocher then went on to say that he had invited Cicek to visit
    Switzerland. When Cicek asked whether he would get into trouble if
    he repeated the historian's comments, Blocher replied: "Nothing will
    happen. But if it does, I'll go to prison with him."

    A billionaire industrialist, Blocher has regularly rocked the boat
    of unity in the coalition government with his outspoken positions
    since he joined the seven-member Cabinet in 2003 after years on the
    outside. As a leader of the nationalist Swiss People's Party, he
    has taken strong positions against asylum seekers and Switzerland's
    membership in the U.N. and other international bodies.

    President Moritz Leuenberger, a Social Democrat, expressed surprised at
    Blocher's remarks Thursday, while Interior Minister Pascal Couchepin, a
    center-right Radical Democrat, said it was wrong for a justice minister
    to complain about his own country's laws while on a foreign visit.

    Blocher, who was in Ankara to mark the 80th anniversary of Turkey
    adopting Swiss laws as a basis for its own penal code, said he would
    hold a news conference on his arrival at Zurich airport Friday morning.

    Anatolia reported that Blocher had expressed support for a Turkish
    proposal to draw up a commission made up of historians to research
    the Armenian issue.

    "In countries like Switzerland ... freedom of expression is necessary
    for democracy to exist. No matter how much we say that freedom of
    expression is important, the legislation which was adopted in 1994,
    unfortunately, is an obstacle to this," Anatolia quoted the minister
    as saying.

    "This law was in fact one that was passed with the punishment of
    those who deny the World War II genocide against Jews in mind. No one
    thought at the time that it would be used against a professor from
    Turkey for remarks he made during a speech to Turks in Switzerland."

    "But this law does exist and it is a headache for us."

    "My ministry will examine what can be done independently of the case
    against Halacoglu and Perincek."

    Turkish historian Yusuf Halacoglu is being investigated by Swiss
    prosecutors for comments he made during a speech in Winterthur, near
    Zurich, in 2004. Prosecutors said this week that they have not been
    able to interview Halacoglu in person. Another case, brought against
    the Turkish left-wing politician Dogu Perincek, will be decided in
    March 2007.

    Perincek had made similar comments about Armenians during a speaking
    tour of Switzerland in 2005.

    Under Switzerland's 1994 anti-racism law, which was originally
    intended to prevent Holocaust denial, it is to illegal to "deny,
    minimize or justify genocide or other crimes against humanity." At
    the time, Blocher voted for the legislation.

    Armenians say that as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors were
    killed in 1915-1923 in an organized campaign and have pushed for
    recognition around the world of the killings as genocide. Turkey
    rejects the claim that a mass evacuation and related deaths of
    Armenians was genocide and says the death toll is inflated.

    GENEVA The Swiss justice minister's comments during an official trip
    to Turkey have caused an outcry at home after he appeared to criticize
    the Alpine country's anti-racism laws.

    According to Turkey's state-owned Anatolia news agency, Christoph
    Blocher told his counterpart, Cemil Cicek, on Wednesday that a law
    under which a Turkish historian is being prosecuted in Switzerland
    for saying "the Armenian genocide did not take place" was "a headache."

    Blocher then went on to say that he had invited Cicek to visit
    Switzerland. When Cicek asked whether he would get into trouble if
    he repeated the historian's comments, Blocher replied: "Nothing will
    happen. But if it does, I'll go to prison with him."

    A billionaire industrialist, Blocher has regularly rocked the boat
    of unity in the coalition government with his outspoken positions
    since he joined the seven-member Cabinet in 2003 after years on the
    outside. As a leader of the nationalist Swiss People's Party, he
    has taken strong positions against asylum seekers and Switzerland's
    membership in the U.N. and other international bodies.

    President Moritz Leuenberger, a Social Democrat, expressed surprised at
    Blocher's remarks Thursday, while Interior Minister Pascal Couchepin, a
    center-right Radical Democrat, said it was wrong for a justice minister
    to complain about his own country's laws while on a foreign visit.

    Blocher, who was in Ankara to mark the 80th anniversary of Turkey
    adopting Swiss laws as a basis for its own penal code, said he would
    hold a news conference on his arrival at Zurich airport Friday morning.

    Anatolia reported that Blocher had expressed support for a Turkish
    proposal to draw up a commission made up of historians to research
    the Armenian issue.

    "In countries like Switzerland ... freedom of expression is necessary
    for democracy to exist. No matter how much we say that freedom of
    expression is important, the legislation which was adopted in 1994,
    unfortunately, is an obstacle to this," Anatolia quoted the minister
    as saying.

    "This law was in fact one that was passed with the punishment of
    those who deny the World War II genocide against Jews in mind. No one
    thought at the time that it would be used against a professor from
    Turkey for remarks he made during a speech to Turks in Switzerland."

    "But this law does exist and it is a headache for us."

    "My ministry will examine what can be done independently of the case
    against Halacoglu and Perincek."

    Turkish historian Yusuf Halacoglu is being investigated by Swiss
    prosecutors for comments he made during a speech in Winterthur, near
    Zurich, in 2004. Prosecutors said this week that they have not been
    able to interview Halacoglu in person. Another case, brought against
    the Turkish left-wing politician Dogu Perincek, will be decided in
    March 2007.

    Perincek had made similar comments about Armenians during a speaking
    tour of Switzerland in 2005.

    Under Switzerland's 1994 anti-racism law, which was originally
    intended to prevent Holocaust denial, it is to illegal to "deny,
    minimize or justify genocide or other crimes against humanity." At
    the time, Blocher voted for the legislation.

    Armenians say that as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors were
    killed in 1915-1923 in an organized campaign and have pushed for
    recognition around the world of the killings as genocide. Turkey
    rejects the claim that a mass evacuation and related deaths of
    Armenians was genocide and says the death toll is inflated.
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