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Greece Bans Denials Of Armenian Genocide

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  • Greece Bans Denials Of Armenian Genocide

    GREECE BANS DENIALS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    EurasiaNet.org
    Sept 10 2014

    September 10, 2014 - 9:59am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Armenia on September 9 got a gift from Greece -- a law making it a
    crime to deny that the World-War-I slaughter of ethnic Armenians in
    Ottoman Turkey amounts to genocide. Needless to say, thanks already
    have been expressed.

    The measure comes as part of a new anti-hate-crime law that applies
    similar penalties for rebuttals of the Holocaust and other war-crimes.

    The law also toughens punishments for racially and sexually motivated
    hate-crimes.

    Greece ranks as the third country after Switzerland and Slovakia
    to criminalize claims that the slaughter, which Turkey downplays as
    one of many atrocities of World War I, ranks as a genocide. In 2012,
    France, home to a large Armenian Diaspora, adopted a similar bill,
    which strained relations with Turkey before being overturned by the
    French Constitutional Court.

    Ankara, which is playing its cards warily with Armenia in the run-up
    to the 2015 centennial anniversary of the massacre, does not appear
    yet to have responded to Athens' criminalization vote.

    Nor, as yet, has Turkic strategic ally Azerbaijan, Armenia's
    enemy-number-one.

    The two "brothers" are not generally quiet on such matters; the
    Azerbaijani government, for instance, stepped up to the plate for
    Turkey on France's genocide-denial decision.

    If it does choose to speak up in this latest case, Baku, arguably,
    could grab some Greek ears.

    Last year, the state-run regional energy player SOCAR (State Oil
    Company of the Azerbaijani Republic) purchased a 66-percent stake in
    the government-controlled gas-distribution network DESFA; the aim,
    as Natural Gas Europe wrote, is for Greece to become " a spring
    board for [SOCAR's] expansion further into Southeast Europe" via the
    Trans-Adriatic Pipeline.

    The gas will come courtesy of that conduit of choice, Turkey.

    The European Commission has yet to approve the takeover, but both
    Greece and Azerbaijan reportedly are as keen as ever.

    Nothing, as yet, suggests that Baku plans to use this energy-card
    to pressure or reprimand Athens over the genocide-denial bill. But
    it does, in theory, give Azerbaijan a potentially influential hand
    to play.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/69916


    From: Baghdasarian
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