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Turkey's Armenians Distrust French Genocide Bill

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  • Turkey's Armenians Distrust French Genocide Bill

    TURKEY'S ARMENIANS DISTRUST FRENCH GENOCIDE BILL
    by Nicolas Cheviron

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 10, 2006 Tuesday 3:42 PM GMT

    Turkey's Armenians have raised their voice against a French bill that
    makes it a jailable offense to deny their ancestors were the victim
    of genocide under Ottoman rule.

    They fear it will antagonize the Turkish majority and further strain
    an already tense debate.

    The draft law, to be debated and voted in the French parliament
    Thursday, calls for one year in prison and a hefty 45,000-euro
    (57,000 dollar) fine for anyone who denies that the World War I
    massacres constituted genocide.

    Among the first to condemn the bill was journalist Hrant Dink, who is
    among a handful of taboo-breaking intellectuals in Turkey who have
    openly argued that the massacres were genocide, drawing nationalist
    ire and landing himself in court.

    "This is idiocy," the Turkish-Armenian Dink said in remarks to the
    liberal daily Radikal. "It only shows that those who restrict freedom
    of expression in Turkey and those who try to restrict it in France
    are of the same mentality."

    Dink, editor of the Turkish-Armenian bilingual weekly Agos, received
    a six-month suspended sentence last year for "insulting Turkishness"
    in an article about the 1915-1917 massacres.

    He is scheduled to go on trial again under the same provision, this
    time for saying the killings were genocide.

    Dink said he was ready to defend freedom of expression even if it
    means running the risk of imprisonment in France.

    "I am standing trial in Turkey for saying it was genocide. If this
    bill is adopted, I will go to France and, in spite of my conviction,
    I will say it was not genocide," he said in a television interview.

    "The two countries can then compete to see who throws me in jail
    first."

    Another Armenian journalist, Etyen Mahcupyan, said Turks see the
    proposed law as an imposition on them to accept the genocide and
    feared the French move could scupper a fledgling, timid debate in
    Turkey to question its past.

    "Initiatives like the one in the French parliament are awkward,"
    he told AFP. "They push the Turks closer to the state and make them
    more vulnerable to manipulation."

    Discussing the massacres was a near-taboo in Turkey until recently
    and an open debate on the issue -- one of the most controversial in
    Turkish history -- still sends nationalist sentiment into frenzy.

    Mahcupyan, a columnist for the conservative daily Zaman, called on
    European countries to back efforts to improve democracy in Turkey,
    which he said was the only way to ensure free debate and challenge
    Ankara's official line.

    The Armenian Patriarchate said the French bill only created obstacles
    to frank dialogue between Armenians and Turks.

    "All initiatives creating obstacles to freedom of expression endanger
    the process of dialogue between the Turkish and Armenian societies,
    and reinforce nationalist and racist tendancies on both sides,"
    the head of the Armenian Church said in a statement.

    Ara Kocunyan, editor of the small Armenian-language daily Jamanak,
    criticized what he called the feeling of "self-victimization" with
    which the Armenian diaspora in the West is pursuing its campaign to
    have the massacres internationally recognized as genocide.

    He urged instead increased efforts to combat the dire economic
    situation in Armenia, to which Turkey has contributed by sealing
    its border.

    "If we stick to the current priorities, I fear those weeping today
    for a father killed 90 years ago will find themselves weeping for
    little Armenia in 50 years' time," Kocunyan said.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

    Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label, saying 300,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire fell apart.
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