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ANKARA: Paris Under Fire For Its Approval Of Genocide Denial Bill

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  • ANKARA: Paris Under Fire For Its Approval Of Genocide Denial Bill

    PARIS UNDER FIRE FOR ITS APPROVAL OF GENOCIDE DENIAL BILL

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-266598-paris-under-fire-for-its-approval-of-genocide-denial-bill.html
    Dec 23 2011
    Turkey

    Criticisms and reactions have rained down on France in the wake of
    a vote in the French Parliament on Thursday that made it a crime to
    deny that the World War I-era mass killings of Armenians was genocide,
    with many accusing the country of greatly damaging its commitment to
    freedom of speech and acting with political motivations.

    Despite strong protests by Turkey, French lawmakers in the National
    Assembly -- the lower house of parliament -- voted overwhelmingly in
    favor of the bill, which will now be debated next year in the senate.

    The bill makes denial of the alleged Armenian genocide a crime
    punishable by a one-year prison sentence and a fine of 45,000 euros.

    Hélène Flautre, the co-chairperson of the EU-Turkey Joint
    Parliamentary Committee, slammed the French genocide law as being not
    "useful" and said the law came into being as a result of political
    motivations. "It is not a useful law. It is a result of the pressure
    of an internal political agenda in the context of presidential
    elections. It is a waste of time, and it will put in danger the
    work of intellectuals in particular in Turkey," she said. She said
    she strongly disagrees with the French National Assembly and to pass
    judgment on history is the job of academics and historians, not that
    of political institutions.

    "I always have in mind what the late [Turkish-Armenian journalist]
    Hrant Dink used to say. As a Turkish-Armenian who believed in the
    genocide, he used to say that he would go to Paris and deny the
    Armenian genocide if the French parliament would accept it. It is
    purely an electoral and mediatic coup," she said. Flautre still voiced
    her hope that the law would not be adopted in the French senate.

    "It still needs to go through the senate and be signed by the
    president. I have colleagues in the French senate who are trying to
    block it. We will see. The battle is not over yet," she said. Another
    reaction to the French law from the European Parliament was voiced
    by European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party (ELDR) President and
    EP member Graham Watson. Watson criticized the French genocide law,
    saying it is a violation of freedom of speech and will make France
    regret its passage in the future. "I am not sure criminalizing
    identification with certain events that are often very difficult to
    prove historically is a good way forward. If you are Germany, you
    wish to criminalize praise of the Holocaust, of course. Everybody
    understands. We managed to avoid such actions in Britain, partly
    because it is against freedom of expression but also something that
    limits academic debate. I suspect the French may come to regret such
    a decision. This is not a matter of criminal law but of historians,"
    Watson told Today's Zaman.

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) also
    expressed concerns on the approval of the French law on Thursday. OSCE
    Representative on Freedom of the Media Dunja Mijatovic said: "I
    fully acknowledge the humanitarian intentions of those members of the
    National Assembly who authored and supported this proposal. However,
    I believe that the final adoption of these legal amendments would
    raise serious concerns with regard to international standards of
    freedom of expression."

    "Furthermore, it could set a precedent internationally for politically
    construed, ad-hoc criminalization of public debates. Criminalization
    of debates on history's true course, even of obviously false and
    offensive statements about a nation's tragic moment, is not conducive
    to a better understanding among people, communities and authorities
    of OSCE participating states."

    Mijatovic also said she feared the passing of this law by a nation
    with a great history of press freedom might prompt other countries in
    the OSCE region to follow France's example and similarly criminalize
    historical statements in violation of their OSCE commitments that
    aim at encouraging a free discussion on issues of public interest.

    Mijatovic said she hoped the French senate would defeat the bill.

    Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Secretary-General Ekmeleddin
    İhsanoglu also directed harsh criticisms at France over its approval
    of the genocide bill, calling it "nonsense."

    İhsanoglu said France was in a "paradoxical contradiction,"
    championing freedom of expression on the one hand while passing
    legislation to ban debate on a "claim regarding history." "The OIC
    rejects this nonsense," İhsanoglu told the Anatolia news agency
    on the sidelines of an OIC meeting in İstanbul on Friday. "There
    are three principles at the core of the French Republic: liberty,
    equality and fraternity. To me, this legislation inflicts harm on
    at least two of them." İhsanoglu also lambasted what he called an
    "unacceptable contradiction" in Europe over freedom of expression,
    saying caricatures insulting the Prophet Muhammad are defended in the
    name of free speech while such a bill could be enacted in the French
    parliament. "When you criticize those who insult others, our Prophet
    and sacred values, we are told that this is freedom of expression.

    When someone draws uncivilized caricatures about our most sacred
    values, no punishment is considered because they say it is an issue of
    freedom of expression. Now, the same people who defend these [insults
    and caricatures] pass a bill to punish those who do not accept this
    claim about history," İhsanoglu said. "This is undisputedly an
    unacceptable contradiction."

    Scientists, not parliaments, can write history, says Lewy Professor
    Guenter Lewy, author, political scientist and professor emeritus
    at the University of Massachusetts, said the French parliament has
    no right to judge history. Lewy, author of "The Armenian Massacres
    in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide," said historians -- not the
    French parliament -- can write the history. He said the French made
    a big mistake by passing such a law because there is no legal ground
    for the Armenian genocide. In a telephone interview with Today's
    Zaman, Lewy said he has devoted 52 years of his life to studying
    genocide and came up with the conclusion that the incidents of 1915
    are not tantamount to genocide. He said history can be written with
    the consensus of scientists and documents, not through the decisions
    of parliaments. Some Armenians and others say 1.5 million Anatolian
    Armenians were killed in a systematic campaign of genocide during
    World War I. Turkey says the figures are inflated and insists that the
    killings occurred as the Ottoman Empire was trying to quell an uprising
    of Armenians, who revolted against Ottoman rule for independence,
    in collaboration with the Russian army, which was then invading
    Eastern Anatolia.

    Renowned French photographer Eric Bouvet described the genocide law
    as a game for French politicians, while adding that the French public
    actually does not care much about Armenians.

    He said the only thing French people know about Armenians is the word
    "Aznavour," and the genocide bill is the work of a French minority
    who are under the influence of the Armenian diaspora.

    Andreas Trampe, a photo editor at the well-known German magazine Stern,
    also said it is wrong to judge a nation by its past. He said Germans
    are not very interested in the Armenian issue, and if there is a need
    to confront history, countries should do this themselves.

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