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Nobel Winner Pamuk Slams French Parliament's Genocide Law

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  • Nobel Winner Pamuk Slams French Parliament's Genocide Law

    NOBEL WINNER PAMUK SLAMS FRENCH PARLIAMENT'S GENOCIDE LAW

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    October 14, 2006 Saturday 9:56 AM EST

    DPA POLITICS Turkey Diplomacy France Pamuk Nobel winner Pamuk slams
    French parliament's genocide law Ankara Turkish Nobel Literature Prize
    winner Orhan Pamuk has hit out at a French parliament decision to
    make it a crime to deny the massacres of Armenians during the First
    World War,

    describing the move as a blow to freedom of speech.

    Speaking to the private NTV television station, Pamuk said late
    Friday the move was not in the French tradition - but that Turkey
    should not overreact.

    "We all know of the French traditions which defend freedom of
    speech... We have all been affected by this. This move however does
    not fit with the traditional French ideals," Pamuk said.

    Pamuk was awarded the Nobel prize on Thursday, the day the lower
    house of the French parliament passed a bill making it a criminal
    offence to deny that a genocide took place in Turkey by Ottoman Turks

    on Christian Armenians.

    While Turkey admits that massacres took place, it vehemently denies
    that the deaths of Armenians during the war were part of a planned
    genocide.

    Earlier this year Pamuk was has himself on trial for "insulting
    Turkishness" for his comments on the matter.

    He was tried, but found not guilty on a technicality, for having told
    a Swiss newspaper "30,000 Kurds and a million Armenians were killed
    in these lands and nobody but me dares talk about it."

    While no official sanctions have been announced by the Turkish
    government, public campaigns have already begun to boycott French
    goods.

    Pamuk though warned that Turkey should not go too far in reaction to
    the French move, saying "one should not burn the whole quilt for the
    sake of a single flea".

    Pamuk's winning the Nobel prize has been widely welcomed by Turks
    although nationalists have claimed the prize was awarded not for
    his writing but for his politics, in particular his comments on the
    killings of Armenians.
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