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Turkish Group Accuses Google Of Limiting Free Speech

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  • Turkish Group Accuses Google Of Limiting Free Speech

    TURKISH GROUP ACCUSES GOOGLE OF LIMITING FREE SPEECH

    FoxNews.com
    Tuesday, August 11, 2009

    The Turkish Coalition of America said Google pulled its ads without
    giving the group a chance to respond to the accusations made by the
    Armenian National Committee of America.

    A Turkish advocacy organization is accusing Google of limiting free
    speech after the Web search leader suspended the group's ads in
    response to complaints by an Armenian-American group that the ads
    were "morally reprehensible" for denying a genocide occurred in the
    Ottoman-Armenian conflict of a century ago.

    The Turkish Coalition of America said Google pulled its ads without
    giving the group a chance to respond to the accusations made by the
    Armenian National Committee of America.

    A Google spokesman told FOX News that it does not accept ads "designed
    to stir up hate or advocate against a protected group." The spokesman
    also said the company does not allow ads for Web sties "that suggest
    revisions to history or attempt to revise history against the interests
    of a protected group."

    "So you can imagine an ad by a Nazi group that said the Holocaust is
    a myth," the spokesman said, offering another example of an ad that
    would be rejected by Google.

    The Turkish Coalition, or TCA, objects to Google's policy.

    "The notion that there is a Google-accepted version of history is
    extraordinarily disturbing," the group said in a statement.

    "Google has failed to distinguish between advocating an idea in an
    historic controversy, which the TCA does, and advocating against a
    group, which the TCA does not," the group said. "This notion strikes
    at the very core of the First Amendment free speech rights."

    The Armenian National Committee of America initiated its online
    campaign against the ads in May, asking supporters to urge Google to
    stop hosting genocide denial ads placed by the Turkish Coalition.

    "Ask Google to live up to its guiding principle of 'Don't be Evil' by
    refusing to profit from an organization seeking a platform for their
    historically inaccurate, morally reprehensible and deeply offensive
    genocidal denial campaign."

    The group said search terms such as "Armenian Genocide," "Armenia" and
    "Armenian" typically spawn a Google ADWords link that reads either :
    "History, Propaganda" or "Learn Armenian Atrocities." Both directed
    users to the Turkish Coalition's Web site that it says features
    "extensive content denying the Armenian Genocide."

    The Republic of Turkey disputes the use of the term "genocide" to
    describe the decimation of the Armenian population of the Ottoman
    Empire during and just after World War I.

    David Saltzman of the Turkish Coalition told FOX News that his group
    is not against any group and lamented that anyone who disputes a
    genocide happened in 1915 is "accused of immorality and criminality."

    The suspension of ads, Saltzman said, is devastating to his group
    because it limits its "presence in the marketplace of ideas."

    Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee
    of America, told FOX News that he was "gratified" that Google decided
    the Turkish group's ads were not "consistent with its values. We
    think Google did the right thing."

    He added that the Turkish group was just as misguided in trying to
    force Google to run the ads as it is in denying the genocide.
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