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Turkey: No Action Against Apology To Armenians

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  • Turkey: No Action Against Apology To Armenians

    TURKEY: NO ACTION AGAINST APOLOGY TO ARMENIANS

    International Herald Tribune
    Jan 26 2009
    France

    ANKARA, Turkey: Prosecutors have decided not to take action against
    organizers of an online apology campaign for the World War I massacres
    of Armenians in Turkey, a prosecutor's office official said Monday,
    suggesting an easing of attitude toward free expression.

    The prosecutor's office began investigating the campaign after six
    people formally complained that the apology violated the controversial
    law Article 301, which makes it illegal to "humiliate" the Turkish
    nation.

    More than 28,000 people added their names to the apology by a group of
    prominent academics, journalists, writers and artists. The campaign was
    hailed as a sign that many in Turkey are ready to break a long-held
    taboo against acknowledging Turkish culpability for the deaths of up
    to 1.5 million Armenians and had raised hopes for a reconciliation
    between Turks and Armenians.

    A counter campaign on the Internet under the title "I do not apologize"
    has attracted more than 65,000 signatures.

    Article 301 has been used to punish statements deemed to insult
    Turkey and to restrict free speech. Nobel Prize winning writer Orhan
    Pamuk was prosecuted for statements on the massacres of Armenians,
    but charges were dropped.

    The Ankara Chief Prosecutor's office ruled there were no legal
    grounds on which to prosecute organizers of the apology by Turkish
    intellectuals issued on the Internet, the official said -- a sign that
    the Turkish judiciary is relaxing its attitude toward expression of
    independent thought.

    The prosecutor's office ruled that "in democratic societies adverse
    opinions are also protected within the framework of freedom of
    thought," the official said anonymously because civil servants are
    barred from speaking to reporters without prior authorization.

    Historians estimate that, in the last days of the Ottoman Empire,
    Armenians were massacred by Ottoman Turks in what is widely regarded
    as the first genocide of the 20th century. Armenians have long pushed
    for the deaths to be recognized as genocide.

    While Turkey does not deny that many died in that era, the country has
    rejected the term genocide, saying the death toll is inflated and the
    deaths resulted from civil unrest during the Ottoman Empire's collapse.

    Turkey and Armenia have recently taken steps toward repairing ties. The
    two neighbors have no diplomatic relations and their shared border has
    been closed since 1993, when Turkey protested Armenia's occupation of
    the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. Turkey backs Azerbaijan's
    claims to the region, which has a high number of ethnic Armenian
    residents but is located within Azerbaijan's borders.

    In September, however, President Abdullah Gul became the first
    Turkish leader to visit Armenia, where he and Armenian President
    Serge Sarkisian watched their countries' football teams play a World
    Cup qualifying match.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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