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Amsterdam: Lower House Does Not Want Ban On Armenian Genocide Denial

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  • Amsterdam: Lower House Does Not Want Ban On Armenian Genocide Denial

    LOWER HOUSE DOES NOT WANT BAN ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DENIAL

    NIS News Bulletin, Netherlands
    April 24 2007

    THE HAGUE, 25/04/07 - There is hardly any support in the Lower House
    for a proposal by small coalition party ChristenUnie to ban denial
    of internationally recognised genocides, such as the Holocaust and
    the Armenian genocide.

    ChristenUnie MP Joel Voordewind yesterday announced to submit a bill
    seeking the ban. The party already proposed including a specific ban on
    genocide denial last year. The Council of State studied this proposal
    and has meanwhile advised that the Dutch law already implicitly bans
    such conduct.

    The Council, the highest advisory body on planned legislation, referred
    to article 137c in the penal code, which says insulting peoples is a
    criminal offence. However, although the Council does not mention this,
    this might also hamper free speech on the Armenian genocide as Turks
    might feel insulted by claims that this indeed took place.

    Armenians yesterday commemorated the 24 April 1915 genocide and
    presented the Lower House with a petition asking for the ChristenUnie
    bill to be adopted. But apart from Party for Freedom (PVV) and orthodox
    Christian SGP all parties reacted extremely cautiously.

    Voordewind pointed out that the EU recently called on all member states
    to ban genocide denial. Nevertheless, Labour (PvdA), the leftwing
    Greens (GroenLinks) and centre-left D66 said yesterday they would
    not support ChristenUnie. The Christian democrats (CDA) suggested
    the Council of State says an amendment would be superfluous. The
    conservatives (VVD) and Socialist Party (SP) were undecided as yet.

    In Turkey, acknowledging the Armenian genocide is illegal. PvdA Justice
    State Secretary Nebahat Albayrak, who is a Turkish as well as a Dutch
    citizen, almost had to resign from the PvdA list of candidates for the
    last Lower House elections in November because she would not recognise
    the genocide. Media pressure waned just in time for Albayrak, but not
    for two other PvdA candidates and one CDA candidate who did have to
    go for the same reason. Albayrak stated that it was up to historians
    to decide whether genocide technically took place.

    http://www.nisnews.nl/public/250407_1.htm
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