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ANKARA: Reactions Erupt Against French Denial Bill After Commission

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  • ANKARA: Reactions Erupt Against French Denial Bill After Commission

    REACTIONS ERUPT AGAINST FRENCH DENIAL BILL AFTER COMMISSION RULES IT UNLAWFUL

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 19 2012
    Turkey

    Following a ruling by a commission in the French Senate deeming a
    French bill seeking to criminalize the denial of "Armenian genocide"
    as being in violation of the French constitution, hopes have been
    raised again among Turks that France may step away from the bill that
    has a high potential of ruining the countries' bilateral ties.

    The Commission of Laws in the French Senate on Wednesday voted
    overwhelmingly against the French government-led bill's compatibility
    with French law, landing a blow to the government's plans to penalize
    anyone denying the mass killings of Armenians in 1915 was genocide,
    the AP reported.

    Although the vote does not block the bill from being passed on Jan.

    23, the date the Senate is scheduled to convene to vote on the bill,
    it still jeopardizes the possibility of the bill's survival in France
    and is regarded as a warning from the commission that might change
    the Senate's mind.

    The Turkish foreign minister, meanwhile, hailed the development as a
    sign that the French also agree that the bill would be unlawful even
    according to French law, which has been proven with the commission's
    decision to propose dropping the bill from the Senate's agenda.

    "This shows that the attempt is unlawful even by the standards of
    French law. We hope the French Senate will act wisely and drop it from
    the agenda before even debating it," Ahmet Davutoglu told the Anatolia
    news agency on Wednesday. When a similar bill was passed in the lower
    house of the French Parliament in 2006, the French Senate acted on the
    commission's opinion on the matter and chose not to debate the bill,
    which Turks hope will be the case again at Monday's Senate session.

    "We consider that if this law was passed, there would be a large risk
    of it being unconstitutional," said Jean-Pierre Sueur, the commission
    head. "We cannot write history with laws. Freedom of expression must
    be respected," he was quoted as saying by AP, and said the decision
    was made on the grounds that it went against the French constitution.

    "With these thoughts, we wanted the Armenian resolution not to
    be placed on the agenda of the French Senate. We believe that the
    Armenian resolution is against the French constitution," Sueur was
    quoted as saying by Anatolia.

    Another strong reaction against the denial bill came in an article
    published by the Guardian on Wednesday, which stated that the French
    Senate should reject the bill "in the name of free speech, the freedom
    of historical inquiry and Article 11 of France's path-breaking
    1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen." The article's
    author, Timothy Garton Ash, a senior fellow at a Stanford University
    institution and a professor at Oxford University, noted that the
    French Parliament was not "equipped and entitled to set itself up as
    a tribunal on world history," since calling an event genocide would
    be imposing international law and would be beyond the capacity of a
    country's parliament.

    Ash also raised the idea that the bill was a politically motivated
    act, since "there is a remarkable correlation between such proposals
    in the French Parliament and national elections, in which half a
    million voters of Armenian origin play a significant part."

    The Union of Associations of Citizens of Turkish Origin (RACORT) also
    made an announcement that showed they agreed with the speculation
    that the French bill was an election-time campaign. "We are sorry
    to see that the issue is being used for an election campaign," the
    announcement was relayed by Anatolia on Thursday as saying. "The
    tragedy surrounding the incidents of 1915 should first be discussed
    between Turkey and Armenia," the announcement also added.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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