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French Against Turks: Talking About Armenian Genocide

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  • French Against Turks: Talking About Armenian Genocide

    FRENCH AGAINST TURKS: TALKING ABOUT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    >From the desk of James McConalogue

    Brussels Journal, Belgium
    Oct 21 2006

    Why has the French government now chosen to punish its citizens for
    denying the Armenian genocide? On Thursday 12 October, the lower house
    of the French Parliament adopted a bill which would provide a jail
    sentence and a heavy fine to anyone denying the genocide committed
    by Ottoman Turks against the Armenians in 1915. The bill was passed
    in the National Assembly by 106 votes to 19. The punishment to be
    issued for the denial of the Armenian genocide - set at a maximum
    of one year prison term and 45,000 euros (£30,000) fine - is equal
    to the punishment already dealt under French law for the denial
    of the holocaust. To many states in the international community -
    in particular Turkey - this move aggressively counters an already
    problematic Turkish law, under which a writer may be prosecuted for
    the opposite: proposing that there were a set of atrocities in 1915
    that the government should accept as "genocide".

    To be clear, according to the UN and many Western scholars, the
    Armenian genocide did happen. International authorities do recognise
    the event as the Armenian genocide of 1915, a direct case of that
    led to the persecution and death of 1.5 million Ottoman Armenians. To
    date, the Turkish government and a number of Turkish nationalists do
    not recognise those series of events as constituting anything like
    "genocide." There is, in this sense, a huge open public space prepared
    for discussion.

    Yet in this new legislative development, it seems important to ask
    why the French government has adopted the bill? Will this bill greatly
    disturb Franco-Turk relations? Why have the French chosen to intervene
    on the free expression of the Armenian genocide at this peculiar time,
    marked by the attempted Turkish EU-membership and the high profile
    controversies surrounding the freedom of speech in Turkey? In my view,
    there is a decisive background to how the French authorities have
    adopted the "denial bill" - but there is a huge vacuum in explaining
    why it has asserted the bill at the cost of infuriating Turkey. The
    French government has passed a bill which first, not only threatens the
    freedom of expression on the Turk-Armenian genocide issue but second,
    will possibly damage Euro-Turk political and economic relations
    irretrievably.

    The adoption of the French "anti-denial bill" was taken as an insult
    by the Turkish government. The Turkish had warned France not to pass
    the legislation. Furthermore, almost as soon as the bill had been
    passed in the National Assembly, the Turkish Foreign Ministry issued
    the following statement: "Turkish-French relations, which have been
    meticulously developed over the centuries, took a severe blow today
    through the irresponsible initiatives of some short-sighted French
    politicians, based on unfounded allegations." Given the degree of
    disgust experienced by the Turkish authorities, why did the French even
    choose to consider the nightmare legislation? The only alleviation
    of the tension seems to have come from President Chirac's subsequent
    half-hearted apology to the Turkish Prime Minister - and perhaps the
    fact that the bill has yet to pass before the Senate and the President
    before it can finally become law.

    In several high profile literary controversies, it became immediately
    noticeable that the Turkish penal system opposed the free discussion,
    publishing and writing on the Armenian genocide. The most influential
    of those trials were those of Orhan Pamuk - who has since won the
    Nobel Prize for Literature - and Elif Shafak - who courageously gave
    birth as her trials were being held. Both authors faced charges
    of "insulting Turkishness" under the notorious Article 301 of the
    Turkish Penal Code. In late December 2005, Orhan Pamuk was charged
    with "insulting Turkishness" after the author had claimed in a Swiss
    newspaper that 30,000 Kurds and one million Ottoman Armenians were
    killed in Turkey yet nobody in the Turkish population would dare
    talk about it. The trial was dismissed by the Turkish Ministry of
    Justice at the beginning of 2006. Later this year, author of Bastard
    of Istanbul, Elif Shafak, also faced charges of "insulting Turkishness"
    under the antediluvian legislation. Subsequent to an earlier dismissal
    in the year, the seventh High Criminal Court had revived the charges
    made by Kemal Kerincsiz's nationalist jurist group, 'The Unity of
    Jurists.' Fortunately, in the final week of September, Shafak was
    immediately acquitted - but not without significant intimidation of
    her novel-writing which delved into the dialogues of the 1915 genocide.

    The suppression of free expression in Turkey has occurred for writers
    and journalists such as Pamuk and Shafak because of the notorious
    Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, prohibiting "insulting
    Turkishness". Ironically, the troubled legislation was passed in
    2005 as a measure of bringing Turkish law into alignment with the
    Copenhagen criteria of the European Union. After the Shafak trial,
    the EU Commission spokesperson, Krisztina Nagy, insisted that Article
    301 "continues to pose a significant threat to freedom of expression
    in Turkey and all those who express a non-violent opinion." That,
    in many respects, reflects the majority-opinion of the EU.

    Then, more recently, it became visible that the Turkish genocide
    issue was not only angering the French government but it was an
    identifiable issue upon which the French were pushing for Turkish
    EU-access membership to be granted - i.e. 'the Turkish should be
    pushed to admit the Armenian genocide, and if they refuse, then they
    shall forfeit a place as an EU-member state'. The opposing French
    Socialist Party - which pushed through the legislation - held that
    the bill protects and rewards the Armenians in exile from a country
    that still refuses to accept the atrocity. Then, on 30 September,
    in a visit to Yerevan, the French President confirmed his position:
    "Should Turkey recognize the genocide of Armenia to join the EU? ... I
    believe so. Each country grows by acknowledging the dramas and errors
    of its past. ... Can one say that Germany which has deeply acknowledged
    the holocaust, has as a result lost credit? It has grown."

    I subsequently reported on how France had been left alone on this
    position since other EU-member states seemed ready to treat Turkey
    softly on this issue - I also speculated, quite rightly, that
    this would have detrimental diplomatic relations with the Turkish
    government, by arguing: "It might also be thought that Chirac
    could not afford to push the condition too far, since it may bring
    substantial damage to Franco-Turk relations before Turkey has even
    begun to attempt its progress towards European harmonization." Now,
    that problematic tension has evolved, it is clear enough for us
    all to see the aggravation caused, illustrating both bilateral and
    multilateral tensions.

    The various European institutions, eager not to be seen as possessing
    double-standards, have been as strong in their condemnations of
    France's new bill as they have been of Turkey's Article 301 in the
    past. Both pieces of legislation condemn the freedom of discussion on
    the 1915 genocide issue; in opposition, the respective governments
    only recognise the acceptance of the genocide (France) or the
    rejection of it (Turkey). EU Enlargement commissioner, Olli Rehn,
    has issued many warnings to Turkey over the literary controversies for
    "insulting Turkishness" but on 9 October, he turned to France to issue
    a similar warning: "...The French law on the Armenian genocide is of
    course a matter for French lawmakers, but there is a lot at stake for
    the European Union as well, and the decision may have very serious
    consequences for EU-Turkey relations ... This [legislation] would
    put in danger the efforts of all those in Turkey - intellectuals,
    historians, academics, authors - who truly want to develop an open
    and serious debate without taboos and for the sake of freedom of
    expression." That is to say, in a nutshell, that the predicament of
    problematic tensions is characterised by a removal of free expression
    on a very pertinent political issue as well as the damage to Turkey's
    future relations in Europe.

    The most flawed of all the French proponents of the bill was French
    MEP, Patrick Gaubert, claiming that "Europe is a continent where
    freedom of speech is guaranteed in an extraordinary manner. But free
    speech ends when the memories of a people are abused and their feelings
    are suffering from lies." Obviously, Gaubert needs to radically revise
    his reviews since that is not the accepted view of defending free
    expression and contrary of his opinion, it is more important to talk
    about sensitive issues such as "genocide" than to lock people up for
    them. Unfortunately for France, it is widely recognised that one of the
    most fundamental defences of free expression in relation to a diversity
    of religious and political doctrines derives not from a French source
    but from one of Britain's great philosopher's, John Stuart Mill. In
    the doctrine of John Stuart Mill's On Liberty, published in 1859,
    the right to freedom of expression and its conditions are stated
    concisely and transparently.

    The most fundamental principle of a freely operating liberal society
    is the right to the "freedom of opinion." The only exception in
    which Mill could conceive that this freedom might be limited was if
    it were to impose severe physical harm onto others - and only under
    very rare conditions could this exception be true. As a result,
    the French government's intervention into a literary controversy
    should not have been at all possible. In France's peculiar rationale,
    it somehow thought that the socialist cause, with the backing of
    the free vote from the ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP),
    was enough to bar free expression. For the rest of Europe, that is
    not reason enough to bar the fundamental right to free expression. Nor
    does the new French reasoning seem reasonable enough to destroy further
    diplomatic relations with Turkey - whether it enters the EU or not.

    http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/1585

    -- Boundary_(ID_HMkRoH70E4VfIG6JJ/jtOw)--
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