Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Statue Commemorating Massacre Of Armenians Stolen From Paris Suburb

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Statue Commemorating Massacre Of Armenians Stolen From Paris Suburb

    STATUE COMMEMORATING MASSACRE OF ARMENIANS STOLEN FROM PARIS SUBURB CANADIAN PRESS

    Canadian Press
    Oct 15 2006

    CHAVILLE, France (AP) - A statue commemorating the First World War-era
    massacre of Armenians in Turkey was stolen, an official said Saturday,
    two days after French legislators approved a bill that would make it
    a crime to deny that the killings amounted to genocide.

    The bronze monument, installed in front of the train station in the
    Paris suburb of Chaville in 2002, disappeared between Friday night
    and Saturday morning, said authorities for the Haut-de-Seine region.

    The police have not ruled out the possibility that the statue, which
    weighs several hundred kilograms, was stolen to be sold as scrap metal,
    said Stephane Topalian, who serves on the board of the local chapter
    of the Armenian church.

    However, Topalian stressed the timing of the robbery, which came after
    France's lower house of parliament on Thursday passed a bill that make
    it a crime to deny the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    around the time of the First World War amounted to genocide. Under
    the bill, those who contest it was genocide would risk up to a year
    in prison.

    The legislation, which infuriated Turkey, passed 106-19.

    President Jacques Chirac's government opposed the bill, although it
    did not use its majority in the lower house to vote it down. Instead,
    most ruling party legislators did not vote on the text that was
    brought by the opposition Socialist party.

    It still needs to be approved by the French Senate and the president
    to become law.

    Armenia accuses Turkey of massacring Armenians during the First World
    War, when Armenia was under the Ottoman Empire. Turkey says Armenians
    were killed in civil unrest during the collapse of the empire, and
    strongly objects to the killings being called genocide.
Working...
X