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Petition asking Switzerland to appeal the ECHR judgment on Armenian

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  • Petition asking Switzerland to appeal the ECHR judgment on Armenian

    Petition asking Switzerland to appeal the ECHR judgment on Armenian
    Genocide denier

    12:23 07.01.2014


    In the struggle against the Turkish denial, the Coordination Council
    of Armenian Organizations of France (CCAF) has decided to launch a
    petition asking Switzerland to appeal the judgment of the European
    Court of Human Rights (ECHR), which found that the ultra-nationalist
    Dogu Perinçek, president of the Workers' Party of Turkey could not be
    condemned for saying publicly in Geneva in 2007, the `so-called
    Armenian genocide is an imperialist lie'. This is in compliance with
    the Freedom of Expression according to Article 10. The petition posted
    on Change.org reads:

    Denialism: Petition against the rogue decision of the European Court
    of Human Rights

    In a decision of 17 December 2013, which will remain an absolute
    disgrace in the history of the European Court of Human Rights, this
    jurisdiction which has never so little deserved its name, decided to
    give reason to Dogu Perincek, the zealous and determined denier of the
    Armenian Genocide by proposing to condemn Switzerland for its
    infringement of freedom of expression!

    Co-founder of the Talaat Committee (the Turkish `Hitler'), a backroom
    created by Ankara to export the denialist theses of Turkey to Europe
    and beyond, Dogu Perincek had appealed against a decision pronounced
    by the Swiss courts, fining him twice for his denialist statements.

    At present imprisoned in Turkey for taking part in the attempted coup
    by the Ergenekon organisation (which did not prevent Ankara from
    defending him before the ECHR in this particular case), Dogu Pericenk
    had indeed claimed that the `Armenian Genocide' was an `international
    lie' at a series of meetings in Switzerland.

    These statements, offensive against the memory of the victims and
    defamatory against their descendants, were condemned under the Swiss
    law on the repression of denialism. The European Court of Human
    Rights, to which he had appealed, is therefore considering condemning
    Switzerland, in the name of an inconsequential reading of the freedom
    of expression and a restrictive interpretation of human dignity. This
    jurisdiction, in a judgement that is just as irresponsible as it is
    grotesque, thus gave its support to the denialist propaganda on the
    Armenian Genocide. And this in accordance with the following arguments
    : 1) There would not be any consensus on the facts since only about
    twenty of the 190 States have recognised them (whereas the
    international community of historians having seriously dealt with this
    issue is unanimous on their qualification as genocide and that a
    number of lobbies, including that of the Turkish government, repeat
    that it is not for the Parliaments to legislate on history...). 2) There
    has not been any international judgement qualifying them (whereas the
    Treaty of Sèvres signed in 1920 by the European Powers provided for
    the Judgement of the persons responsible for this crime against
    humanity, treaty replaced in 1923 by that of Lausanne in which these
    same European Powers, in an attitude typical of Munich before its
    time, were to abandon any idea of rendering Justice to the Arminian
    people in the name of new relations with Kemalist Turkey). 3) The
    notion of genocide would remain unclear and therefore offer scope for
    debate (whereas the crime of genocide is clearly established by the
    Rome Statute establishing the International Criminal Court and that
    the very concept of genocide was forged by Raphaël Lemkin, starting
    precisely from the extermination of the Armenians of the Ottoman
    Empire).

    At one year from the commemorations for the hundredth anniversary of
    this crime against humanity, as it was named on 24 May 1915 by France,
    England and Russia at a time when the word genocide had not yet been
    created, the ECHR has just assassinated the one and a half million
    victims of the `Young Turk' government for the second time. And this
    following an unfair trial in which only the Turkish party was able to
    plead, while the Arminian party and those who defend its universal
    just cause were not invited to the proceedings.

    Switzerland, which, in addition, decided on 10 October to reinforce
    its strategic partnership with Turkey, has until 17 March to lodge an
    appeal against this unfair judgement which, in sentencing it, also
    opens the road to an unbridled propagation of denialism.

    Through this petition, we should like to call on the Swiss authorities
    to lodge an appeal against this judgement before the Grand Chamber of
    the ECHR and, in so doing, allow an open debate to be held and a fair
    trial on a essential issue for our times and our European identity, by
    giving other States, including France, the possibility of being heard.
    Furthermore, such an appeal would allow the Arminian party, excluded
    from the hearing until now, to be equally represented with Turkey,
    which would bring a minimum balance to this `justice' which, until
    now, has only been based on one side of the scales.


    http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/01/07/petition-asking-switzerland-to-appeal-the-echr-judgment-on-armenian-genocide-denier/

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