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  • Farewell To Neutrality And Human Rights Protection?

    FAREWELL TO NEUTRALITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS PROTECTION?

    Sacramento Bee, CA
    Feb 25 2014

    By Switzerland-Armenia Association

    BERN, February 25, 2014 -- /PRNewswire/ --

    - Racial Discrimination: Switzerland's Passiveness Before ECHR Ruling?

    - Indication: The "Factsheet national and international positions
    in favor of a revision of the ECHR ruling" can be downloaded free of
    charge under:

    http://www.presseportal.ch/de/pm/100001660/?langid=2 -

    The ruling of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) of 17th
    December 2013 Perincek c. Suisse (no. 27510/08) has serious procedural
    and substantive shortcomings. Switzerland still has the chance to
    appeal a final revision at the Great Chamber of the ECHR. The deadline
    for this appeal is 17th March 2014.

    The Strasburg ruling is not just unacceptable for Swiss citizens
    of Armenian origin, but also for the Swiss justice system which has
    condemned twice at the highest level the denial of the genocide of
    the Armenian people.

    The Switzerland-Armenia Association (SAA) requested a legal opinion
    from renowned international public lawyers as well as Swiss penal
    code experts. This document was submitted to the Federal Council and
    Head of the Swiss Federal Department of Justice and Police (FDJP)
    and the Swiss representative at the ECHR with the urgent request to
    consider thoroughly an appeal for a revision of the ruling.

    A refusal to appeal the ECHR ruling would mean that Switzerland

    - bids farewell to the basic principles of the protection of human
    rights, primarily however human dignity;

    - back steps from her international commitments in combating racism
    (cf Switzerland's report before the UN Committee on the Elimination
    of Racial Discrimination, CERD);

    - proactively favors a weakening of her own law;

    - takes clearly sides, violating thus massively neutrality
    principles. Switzerland's mediation role in the solution of the
    conflict between Armenia and Turkey on the one hand, and between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan on the other - the latter elevated to a central
    task in the annual program of the Swiss OSCE Chairmanship by President
    Didier Burkhalter-would lose entirely its credibility.

    In addition, a refusal would also mean that Switzerland essentially
    ignores the numerous calls of Swiss and international NGOs for a
    revision appeal at the Great Chamber of the ECHR, including positions
    of recognized international experts in genocide research and in
    human rights. The latter emphasize the factual foundation of the
    genocide on the Armenian people and speak against the establishment
    of a hierarchy of genocides as de facto carried out by the ECHR
    ruling. In the case of a refusal, Switzerland would further ignore
    the substantively argued position of the largest and oldest Turkish
    human rights organization (Human Rights Association in Turkey, IHD),
    as published yesterday. This position describes the racial impact
    of the ECHR ruling of 17th December 2013 and considers a revision of
    this ruling with a view towards the situation of national minorities
    in Turkey as indispensable. IHD emphasizes amongst others that the
    ECHR has contradicted, with its ruling, previous decisions of the
    European Parliament.

    It is assumed that the decision for a revision appeal rests entirely
    in the competence of Swiss Federal Concillor Simonetta Sommaruga. The
    sudden visit of State Secretary Yves Rossier on 27th January 2014 in
    the Armenian capital Yerevan, however, opens up the speculation that
    the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs will also claim a
    role in the decision. Should, however, Switzerland refrain from using
    her right to request a revision, this would send the wrong signals
    with unforeseeable international consequences: Switzerland's good
    offices in a resolution of a conflict would not be taken seriously
    any longer. The SAA recalls that the Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
    Davutoglu's visit to Bern on 10th October 2013 led the Swiss Federal
    Department of Foreign Affairs to announce a strategic partnership
    with Ankara. President Burkhalter has therefore not hidden the fact
    that this was primarily tied to the Swiss expectations to be invited
    by Turkey in 2015 on the occasion of Turkey's Chairmanship of the G20
    Summit. A passive position would further show that Switzerland does
    not give priority to the defense of her own basic constitutional
    rights. Finally, a refusal to appeal the ruling would give those
    populist forces an upswing who have traditionally sought to abolish
    the anti-racism penal code and the Swiss Federal Commission Against
    Racism. At the European level, Switzerland would confirm the supremacy
    of the legal body of the freedom of expression before all the other
    legal bodies and thus contribute to the violation of future human
    rights principles.

    We hope that President Didier Burkhalter - who by the way has only
    recently condemned with clear words the denial of all crimes against
    humanity on the occasion of his visit to Auschwitz at the end of
    January 2014 - as well as the Head of the FDJP, Federal Concillor
    Simonetta Sommaruga, are aware of their responsibility towards
    Switzerland and the world at large.

    Attachment: Factsheet national and international positions in favor
    of a revision of the ECHR ruling

    Contact: Andreas Dreisiebner, SAA Co-President [email protected]
    Phone +41-79-671-86-19

    Sarkis Shahinian, SAA Honorary President [email protected]
    Phone +41-76-399-16-25

    SOURCE Switzerland-Armenia Association

    http://www.sacbee.com/2014/02/25/6187039/farewell-to-neutrality-and-human.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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