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ANKARA: Turkish Consulate Official Intervenes At IFEX Panel In Oslo

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Consulate Official Intervenes At IFEX Panel In Oslo

    TURKISH CONSULATE OFFICIAL INTERVENES AT IFEX PANEL IN OSLO

    BIA Magazine
    http://www.bianet.org/english/freedom-of- expression/115018-turkish-consulate-official-inter venes-at-ifex-panel-in-oslo
    June 5 2009

    At a panel discussing the denial of an Armenian "genocide", a Turkish
    consulate official reiterated the argument that Armenians were deported
    for treason.

    Erol ONDEROÄ~^LU [email protected] Oslo - BÄ°A News Center 05 June
    2009, Friday

    At the general meeting of the International Freedom of Expression
    eXchange (IFEX) in Oslo, a panel was discussing "Laws on Holocaust
    Denial and Politics: Legal Limits".

    Publisher Ragip Zarakolu from Turkey also spoke at the panel.

    Official denial continues Following the presentations, a person
    describing themselves as an offical at the Turkish consulate in Norway,
    objected to the use of "genocide" that had been used by speakers
    to describe both what happened to Jews in the Third Reich and what
    happened to Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

    He added, "They were not deported because they were Armenians or
    because of their race, but because they collaborated with the enemy."

    Criticism of Turkish legislation Zarakolu, owner of Belge Publications,
    had joined the panel instead of historian Taner Akcam, who was unable
    to attend. Akcam's book, entitled " A Shameful Act: The Armenian
    Genocide and The Question of Turkish Responsibility", has caused
    controversy in Turkey, and he is one of the first Turkish academics
    to name what happened a genocide.

    Zarakolu criticised Articles 301 and 305 of the Turkish Penal Code,
    saying that they prevented people from discussing the Armenian
    genocide. He himself has been convicted under Article 301 for
    "denigrating the Turkish state or state organs", but was acquitted of
    "inciting hatred and hostility." Zarakolu said, "The laws encourage
    denial."

    The consulate official said that, following international formulations,
    what happened could not be called a "genocide". As for Article 301
    and other laws, he said, "All countries make such laws to protect
    the unity of their territory and security."

    The audience was surprised at the interference of the consulate
    official.

    "Memories are erased" Yael Danieli, manager for the US-based
    Group Project for Holocaust Survivors and their Children, said,
    "If the judiciary and the media do not do their duty, they do not
    only deprive genocide victims and avoid telling the truth, but they
    also erase memories."

    Anton Weiss-Wendt of Oslo's Holocaust and Religious Minorities
    Studies Centre, said, "I don't believe that denial can be solved in
    courts. Expectations are so high that expecting a court to define
    and prove a genocide would cause disappointment."

    New members Two organisations from Turkey are members of IFEX: bianet
    and the Initiative against Crimes of Thought. The following are new
    members, increasing the number of IFEX members to 88 worldwide:

    * The Association of Caribbean Media Workers (ACM) helps to cover an
    underrepresented area in IFEX, with 200 members in over 20 countries
    in the Caribbean.

    * Since 2003, the Committee for Free Expression (C-Libre) in Honduras
    has circulated around 150 free expression alerts across various
    networks.

    * The Latin American Observatory for the Freedom of Expression (OLA)
    based in Peru brings together free expression news from members in 10
    countries, and covers some of the more untraditional communicators,
    such as artists, cartoonists and TV and radio production staff.

    * The Centre for Independent Journalism (CIJ) in Malaysia is one of
    the founding partners of the Southeast Asian Press Alliance, focusing
    on training, media defence and advocacy for journalists in Malaysia.

    * Pacific Freedom Forum (PFF) is a new network of mainly independent
    media that covers 21 countries in the Pacific.

    * The Exiled Journalists Network (EJN), based in the U.K., is run by
    and for exiled journalists. It has recently announced plans to create
    Press Freedom House, a safe house in London modelled after the Maison
    des Journalistes in Paris, that will give new arrivals temporary
    accommodation and training - and a chance to adapt to life in the U.K.

    * London-based Privacy International has been around since 1990,
    campaigning worldwide to protect people from surveillance and privacy
    invasions by governments and corporations.

    * Public Association of Journalists (PAJ) is IFEX's first member in
    Kyrgyzstan, and the second in the region.

    * The Palestinian Center for Development and Media Freedoms
    (MADA) is the first IFEX member located in the volatile Palestinian
    Territories and the only group exclusively dedicated to free expression
    there. (EO/AG)
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