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French Pass Bill That Punishes Denial of Armenian Genocide

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  • French Pass Bill That Punishes Denial of Armenian Genocide

    THE NEW YORK TIMES
    Oct 13 2006

    French Pass Bill That Punishes Denial of Armenian Genocide
    By Thomas Crampton


    PARIS

    France's National Assembly, defying appeals from Turkey, approved
    legislation Thursday that would make it a crime to deny that the mass
    killings of Armenians in Turkey during and after World War I were
    genocide.

    The legislation, which was criticized by Turkey's government and some
    European Union officials, could further complicate talks for Turkey's
    admission to the Union.

    With 106 deputies voting in favor and 19 against, the law sets fines
    of up to 45,000 euros, or about $56,000, and a year in prison for
    denying the genocide. Of the 577 members of the Assembly, four
    abstained and 448 did not vote at all, raising the question of
    whether there would be enough political will to push the law through
    the Senate.

    Scholars and most Western governments have recognized the killing of
    more than a million Armenians by Ottoman Turks from 1915 to 1919 as
    genocide. But the subject is still taboo in Turkey, and charges have
    been pursued against writers and others who have brought attention to
    the genocide, including Orhan Pamuk, the novelist who was just
    awarded the Nobel Prize in literature.

    `The Turkish people refuse the limitation of freedom of expression on
    the basis of groundless claims,' the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in
    a statement. `With this draft law, France unfortunately loses its
    privileged status in the eyes of Turkish public opinion.'

    Ali Babacan, the Turkish economy minister and the country's lead
    negotiator on talks with Europe, said he could not rule out
    consequences for French companies.

    `What happened in France today, we believe, is not in line with the
    core values of the European Union,' Babacan said, adding that the
    government would not encourage a boycott of French goods.

    In Brussels, Belgium, the European Union warned that the law could
    have a harmful effect on negotiations. `It would prohibit dialogue
    which is necessary for reconciliation on the issue,' said Krisztina
    Nagy, a spokeswoman for the Union. `It is not up to law to write
    history. Historians need to have debate.'

    Turkey's potential membership in the European Union has been a hot
    political topic in France ahead of the presidential elections next
    spring. But the new legislation has been more of a campaign issue in
    France, which has one of Europe's largest Armenian populations.
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