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French Panel Rejects Armenia Genocide Bill

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  • French Panel Rejects Armenia Genocide Bill

    FRENCH PANEL REJECTS ARMENIA GENOCIDE BILL

    Aljazeera.com
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2012/01/20121194532961594.html
    Jan 19 2012
    Qatar

    Senate commission rejects bill to make it illegal to deny mass killing
    of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915 to 1916.

    A French Senate committee has rejected a bill to make it illegal to
    deny that mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks nearly a century
    ago amounted to genocide.

    The Senate's Commission of Laws on Wednesday voted 23 to nine, with
    eight abstentions, that such a bill could violate constitutional
    protections, including freedom of speech.

    "We consider that if this law was passed, there would be a large risk
    of it being unconstitutional," Jean-Pierre Sueur, the commission head,
    said. "We cannot write history with laws. Freedom of expression must
    be respected."

    Despite the committee's rejection, the bill is expected to be passed
    in the Senate's final vote on Monday, in which most senators opposed
    to the legislation are expected to abstain.

    The proposed legislation has soured relations between Paris and
    Ankara, with Turkey imposing symbolic sanctions and Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan accusing the French of 'genocide' during France's
    132-year colonial rule in Algeria.

    "Ankara welcomes the decision by the Laws Commission at the
    Senate which clearly shows its position by saying that this bill is
    unconstitutional," Engin Solakoglu, spokesman at the Turkish embassy
    in Paris, told the AFP news agency.

    'Sympathy for suffering'

    In a statement, the commission said: "There was a genocide, and the
    commission wants to express its infinite respect for the Armenian
    people, and the terrible experiences that they have endured".

    But the panel also expressed doubts about "the legitimacy of the
    intervention of the legislature in the field of history" and suggested
    that commemorations or legislative resolutions might be a better way
    to express sympathy for the suffering than laws to criminalise some
    types of speech.

    France formally recognised the 1915 to 1916 killings as genocide in
    2001, but provided no penalty for denying it.

    The proposed law would set punishment of up to one year in prison and
    a fine of up to $59,000 for those who deny or 'outrageously minimise"
    the killings - placing such denial on par with those of the Holocaust.

    France is home to an estimated 500,000 people of Armenian origin.

    Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died when the Ottoman Turks deported
    them from eastern Anatolia to the Syrian desert and elsewhere in 1915
    to 1916. They were killed or died from starvation or disease.

    Armenians say 1.5 million died. Turkey estimates the total to be
    300,000.

    The dispute about whether it was genocide centres on the degree to
    which the killings were orchestrated.

    Turkey admits atrocities were committed but argue that there was no
    systematic attempt to destroy the Christian Armenian people.

    Even if the Senate - the upper house of parliament - was to reject
    the bill, the more powerful lower house - the National Assembly -
    could resurrect the bill and try again.

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