Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

CYPRUS: Armenian Genocide Denial Penalised, Despite Objections

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

  • CYPRUS: Armenian Genocide Denial Penalised, Despite Objections

    CYPRUS: ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DENIAL PENALISED, DESPITE OBJECTIONS

    03 April, 2015

    The House of Representatives amended a 2011 bill on genocide denial
    and crimes against humanity on Thursday, by penalising such acts
    without prior conviction by an international court, making Cyprus
    the fourth European country after Switzerland, Slovakia and Greece
    to criminalise denial of the Armenian Genocide by the Turks in 1915.

    ________________________________

    The European Parliament also passed a relevant resolution on March 12.

    During an early-day session, House President Yiannakis Omirou, who
    was hosting the Armenian National Assembly Speaker Galoust Sahakyan,
    called it a historic day, noting that this legislation "allows the
    parliament to restore, with unanimous decisions and resolutions,
    historical truths."

    While on an official trip to Armenia last November, Omirou promised
    his Armenian counterpart that Cyprus would criminalise the denial of
    the Armenian Genocide.

    He also took the extraordinary decision to chair the House Legal
    Affairs committee meeting on Monday, where the amendment was approved
    and forward to the plenary session for a vote, after what seemed to
    be lobbying against the bill by some diplomatic circles.

    Daily Simerini had reported a week ago that the Presidency wanted
    to block the amendment, citing conflict with the Republic's foreign
    policy affairs. But reports suggested that the pressure had actually
    come from some western diplomatic missions in Nicosia, in an effort
    not to upset Turkey.

    Omirou's intervention helped allay fears from the two leading political
    parties, ruling DISY and communist AKEL, that criminalising genocide
    denial could hamper peace talks with the Turkish Cypriots, that may
    resume after a six-month break. Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades
    pulled out of the UN-sponsored talks when Turkey sent its exploration
    vessel, the Barbaros, into the Republic's Exclusive Economic Zone. Now
    that the vessel has left Cyprus waters, the government in Nicosia
    expects UN mediators to help in the resumption of talks, but after
    a new Turkish Cypriot leadership has been elected in elections on
    April 27.

    The Representative of the Armenian Community in the House of
    Representatives, Vartkes Mahdessian, welcomed the resolution and
    said that on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the massacres
    by Ottoman Turks, the Cyprus parliament made a historic decision
    unanimously passing a Law making the denial of the Armenian Genocide
    a criminal offence.

    He remarked that in 1975 the Cyprus House of Representatives became the
    first parliament in Europe and the second in the world, to recognise
    the Armenian Genocide.

    Cyprus recognised the Armenian Genocide in 1975 with a resolution
    adopted by the Parliament, which was repeated in 1982, whereas in 1990
    the Parliament unanimously adopted another resolution which set the
    24th of April as the national day to commemorate the Armenian Genocide.

    On January 26, 1965, then Foreign Minister and later Speaker of the
    House and Republic President Spyros Kyprianou, raised the issue of
    recognition of the Genocide at the UN General Assembly Meanwhile,
    DISY sources dismissed the notion, as reported by Simerini, that
    Omirou and the presidency were at odds over amending the law.

    The only reservations the President had was that the government was
    not consulted on the matter, which pertains to foreign policy.

    The Cyprus Mail quoted DISY sources as refuting media reports that
    MPs had argued in the committee against criminalising denial because
    it might anger the Turkish Cypriots and Turkey, particularly at this
    juncture when peace talks may resume.

    Under the law, the denial or "flagrant downgrading" of recognised
    war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, provided the crime
    has been recognised by an international court, is punishable by up
    to five years imprisonment and/or a fine of EURO 10,000.

    International organisations officially recognising the Armenian
    Genocide include the European Parliament, the Council of Europe,
    and the World Council of Churches.

    http://www.financialmirror.com/news-details.php?nid=34022

Working...
X