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France: Natl Assembly passes draft law criminalising Genocide denial

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  • France: Natl Assembly passes draft law criminalising Genocide denial

    IFEX, Canada
    Oct 14 2006

    National Assembly passes draft law criminalising the denial of
    Armenian genocide



    Français: L'Assemblée nationale adopte un projet de loi pénalisant la
    négation du génocide arménien
    Country/Topic: France
    Date: 13 October 2006
    Source: Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
    Person(s):
    Target(s):
    Type(s) of violation(s): censored
    Urgency: Threat
    (RSF/IFEX) - RSF strongly regrets the first reading passage of a law
    that would make it a crime punishable by prison sentence to deny the
    1915 Armenian genocide. The organisation notes that memorial laws are
    part of the creation of an official historical truth - a practice
    typical of totalitarian regimes - and expressed the hope that
    senators, who are to examine the draft law shortly, will have the
    wisdom to reject it.

    The French National Assembly passed the draft law on 12 October 2006.
    The law would make denial of the Armenian genocide a crime punishable
    by five years in jail and a 45,000-euro fine.
    The law complements a 19 January 2001 law which publicly recognised
    the genocide.

    "There is obviously no question of going back on the recognition of
    the Armenian genocide, but legislating on it will expose anyone
    denying it to harsh judicial penalties set out by the 18 July 1881
    law on press freedom (Article 24a). Memorial laws contribute to the
    creation of an official historical truth. This practice, typical of
    totalitarian regimes, is incompatible with France's fundamental
    values, starting with freedom of expression," said the organisation.

    "Not only is it absurd that free expression - however contestable,
    and that is not the question - should be subjected to a constraint
    which is, in addition, a threat, but it seems to us that this
    legalistic concept of history will be much more likely to stoke up
    antagonism than to promote debate.

    "It is particularly symbolic that this vote should have been held on
    the same day of the awarding of the Nobel Prize for literature to
    Orhan Pamuk, who was himself taken to court by the Turkish
    authorities for having raised the issue of this genocide," RSF
    stressed.

    RSF hopes that senators due to examine the law on second reading will
    pay less attention to upcoming elections and have the wisdom to
    reject it. If not, it could have incalculable consequences for all
    historians as well as for press freedom.

    MORE INFORMATION:



    For further information, contact Zuzana Loubet del Bayle at RSF, 5,
    rue Geoffroy Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 67, fax:
    +33 1 45 23 11 51, e-mail: [email protected], Internet:
    http://www.rsf.org

    http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/78373/
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