Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ECHR Verdict On Perincek's Case Contradicts EC Framework Decision: D

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ECHR Verdict On Perincek's Case Contradicts EC Framework Decision: D

    ECHR VERDICT ON PERINCEK'S CASE CONTRADICTS EC FRAMEWORK DECISION: DOMINIQUE DE BUMAN

    13:25, 17 February, 2014

    YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 17, ARMENPRESS: The European Court of Human Rights
    (ECHR) contradicts a European Council Framework Decision that ordered
    member states to ensure that publicly condoning, denying or grossly
    trivializing crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war
    crimes were penalized. Armenpress reports that the Inter Press Service
    (IPS) was informed about it by Dominique de Buman, the Swiss national
    councilor and co-president of the Switzerland-Armenia Association
    (SAA). Such framework decisions do not pose a legal basis for the
    ECHR, however. De Buman also referred to the UN Convention on the
    Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. "Don't forget that
    the convention was adopted in reaction to the Holocaust as well as the
    Armenian genocide," he told IPS. The ECHR ruling has sparked a debate
    in Switzerland on whether or not the government should appeal the
    decision and if and how Swiss anti-racism legislation may be amended.

    Councilor De Buman told IPS he was optimistic that an appeal could
    lead to a further examination of the case, as the ECHR ruling wasn't
    unanimous: "Two of the seven judges had expressed a joint concurring
    opinion. They stated that there existed an international consensus
    regarding the characterization of the massacres against the Armenian
    people."

    Judges András Sajó and Guido Raimondi would welcome a Swiss appeal
    to the Grand Chamber, as so far the court has never taken a view on
    the massacres and deportations of the Armenians. "It's our symbolic
    and moral obligation to define and qualify these events," they wrote.

    Switzerland's Federal Office of Justice hasn't yet taken a decision
    in that regard.

    The ECHR ruling plays into the hands of right-wing groups such as the
    Swiss People's Party (SVP) who have repeatedly tried to knock down the
    country's anti-racism legislation. Consequently, the party's long-time
    leader Christoph Blocher demanded a change of the criminal code.

    Legally, the ECHR ruling doesn't force Switzerland to amendments.

    Silvia Bär, the SVP's secretary general, told IPS that the party is
    preparing a parliamentary request to specify or even abolish Swiss
    anti-racism legislation. "We reject racism. However, the current
    application of the legislation is getting increasingly absurd and
    incorrectly limits the right to freedom of expression."

    According to Bär, the anti-racism legislation is being misused to
    discipline and sanction unwelcome opinions. In addition, the SVP
    demands that Switzerland resigns from the International Convention
    on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and that it dissolves
    the Federal Commission against Racism (EKR).

    Martine Brunschwig Graf, National Councilor for the Liberals and
    President of the EKR has doubts about these intentions. "The ECHR
    ruling is complex and doesn't put the Swiss anti-racism paragraph
    in question," she told IPS. From 1995 to 2012, Swiss courts have
    sentenced accusedpersons in 310 cases under that paragraph.

    Brunschwig Graf calls the legislation an indispensable instrument:
    "The fight against racism requires prevention at all levels, but also
    repression if certain limits are surpassed."

    Among the other parties, the Swiss anti-racism legislation enjoys broad
    support. Hansjörg Fehr of the Social Democrats told the Swiss national
    radio that if the criminal code was to be changed, then "we need a
    passage that explicitly punishes the denial of the Armenian genocide."

    The debate is expected to ignite at the next parliamentary session
    in March.

    The European Court of Human Rights satisfied the claim of the
    political figure and the leader of the Workers' Party Dogu Perincek,
    who was recognized guilty by the Swiss Court for denying the Armenian
    Genocide. In 2008 the Swiss Court sentenced Perincek for three-month
    detention for the denial of the Armenian Genocide and then the Court
    substituted the detention verdict with an administrative fine. The
    European Court of Human Rights substantiated the satisfaction of the
    Perincek's claim with the fact that the Swiss Court had violated the
    7th and 10th articles on freedom of speech of the European Convention.

    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/750333/echr-verdict-on-perin%C3%A7ek%E2%80%99s-case-contradicts-ec-framework-decision-dominique-de-buman.html

Working...
X