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France's Armenian Genocide Bill Threatens Free Speech, Says Amnesty

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  • France's Armenian Genocide Bill Threatens Free Speech, Says Amnesty

    FRANCE'S ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL THREATENS FREE SPEECH, SAYS AMNESTY

    Ekklesia
    http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/16157
    Jan 26 2012
    UK

    A bill passed by the French Senate would violate freedom of expression
    by making it a criminal offence to publicly question events termed as
    "genocide" under French law, Amnesty International has said.

    In 2001, a French law officially declared that the mass killings
    and forced displacement of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915
    constituted a genocide.

    The new bill would impose up to a one-year jail sentence and/or a
    ~@45,000 fine on anyone found guilty of "outrageously" questioning
    or trivialising such events.

    "This bill, if implemented, would have a chilling effect on public
    debate and contravene France's international obligations to uphold
    freedom of expression," said Nicola Duckworth, Europe and Central Asia
    Director at Amnesty International. "People should be free to express
    their opinions on this issue - in France, Turkey and elsewhere."

    Turkish authorities have consistently denied that what took place
    in 1915 was an act of genocide. People in Turkey who contest that
    official version of the events have been prosecuted, in violation of
    their right to freedom of expression.

    The European Court of Human Rights has repeatedly held that freedom
    of expression applies not only to inoffensive ideas, "but also to
    those that offend, shock or disturb the State or any sector of the
    population".

    International human rights law allows for restrictions on the exercise
    of freedom of expression if necessary and proportionate for certain
    specific purposes including respect of the rights or reputations of
    others or to protect national security or public order.

    Amnesty International says it believes that neither of these applies
    in this instance, and the new legislation would criminalise the
    exercise of freedom of expression that is seen as "outrageously"
    contesting or trivialising historical events or their characterisation.

    International human rights law also obliges states to prohibit advocacy
    of national, racial or religious hatred that constitutes incitement
    to discrimination, hostility or violence.

    But while the French authorities claim the law would implement EU
    guidelines aimed at combating racist or xenophobic speech that is
    "likely to incite violence or hatred", the new bill does not mention
    such incitement as an element of the types of expression that will
    be prohibited, and France already has in place legislation which
    prohibits such incitement.

    "The real issue at stake with this bill is not whether the large-scale
    killings and forced displacement of Armenians in 1915 constituted a
    genocide, but the French authorities' attempt to curtail freedom of
    expression in response to that debate," stressed Nicola Duckworth.

    "French authorities are failing to comply with their international
    human rights obligations."

    * Ekklesia has shared a concern that the truth of the Armenian
    Genocide - a quite distinct issue from the appropriateness
    or otherwise of this French law - should be known. Our news,
    comment, research and resources on the issue can be accessed here:
    http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/armeniangenocide

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