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Threat to free speech France should renounce attempt to legislate

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  • Threat to free speech France should renounce attempt to legislate

    Financial Times (London, England)
    October 13, 2006 Friday
    London Edition 1

    Threat to free speech France should renounce an attempt to legislate
    history


    Yesterday's vote by France's National Assembly was an act of
    diplomatic folly and electoral opportunism. It dealt a blow to
    Turkey's hopes of joining the European Union and damaged the cause of
    free speech within theEU itself.

    By a margin of 106 to 19, the chamber backed a bill that could jail
    people for a year for denying that there was an Armenian genocide
    early last century. The move is an attempt to use legislation rather
    than persuasion to change others' beliefs - a tactic already proving
    counterproductive in Turkey and running counter to Europe's
    traditions of free expression and open debate.

    The vote was the result of transparent electioneering. French
    Socialists insisted on pushing the bill through, while most deputies
    kept away. Characterising the murder of up to 1.5m Armenians in
    Anatolia in 1915-18 has no bearing on France's vital interests. But
    it is an issue of great concern for the 450,000 French citizens of
    Armenian origin ahead of the 2007 elections.

    This comes at a terrible time for Turkey's troubled EU negotiations
    and all they symbolise for an accommodation between Europe and the
    Islamic world. If the bill ever became law, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    Turkey's prime minister, could run the risk of arrest while on French
    soil.

    Fortunately, the legislation is likely to die in the French Senate.
    But by allowing the measure to get this far, France's politicians
    have damaged the case for sorely needed reform in Turkey itself.
    Officials and politicians in Ankara demur from ditching Turkey's own
    rules against "denigrating" the Turkish state, arguing that the
    French proposal shows the limits of the EU's own respect for free
    speech.

    Europe's record is already blotted. Austria imprisoned the historian
    David Irving for denying the holocaust, making him a martyr for
    far-right sympathisers. Britain's government sought - but luckily
    failed - to pass legislation that would have restricted the right to
    criticise religion.

    The risk is that France's strong-arm tactics will only bolster
    Turkey's intolerance of any mention of Armenian genocide. As a
    result, it is now more likely that Turkish writers will continue to
    be prosecuted for such references - the indignity suffered among
    others by Orhan Pamuk, the novelist who yesterday won the Nobel
    prize.

    Turkey's combination of prickliness and authoritarianism means it
    will have to change radically if it is to join the EU one day. The
    country needs to address the massacres of Armenian families that
    preceded the creation of the modern Turkish state - whether they are
    called genocide or not.

    That does not excuse France's pandering politicians. President
    Jacques Chirac's government was right yesterday to repudiate the
    genocide bill. The rest of the political class must now follow - and
    renounce the idea of legal curbs on what people say or think.
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