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  • Tessa Hofmann/Sarkis Bezelgues 'Recognition' of genocide ...

    Nouvelles d'Arménie, France
    Jan 1 2007


    Tessa Hofmann/Sarkis Bezelgues 'Recognition' of genocide and
    penalization of genocide denial

    German Journal for Politics and Economics of the Middle East 2/2006

    Table of Contents

    Tessa Hofmann/Sarkis Bezelgues 'Recognition' of genocide and
    penalization of genocide denial

    Abstract : The political, legal and human rights background and the
    impact of the motion of the German Bundestag of June 16, 2006,
    "Remembering and commemorating the expulsions and massacres of the
    Armenians in 1915 - Germany must make a contribution to
    reconciliation between Turks and Armenians".

    The 'recognition' of genocides committed in the first half of the
    20th century and be-fore the UN Convention on the Punishment and
    Prevention of Genocide (1948) causes particular legal, political and
    moral problems. Communities of survivors and their descendents fight
    for the public and official recognition of such crimes, and, be-ing
    rejected by the States responsible for the crimes, they address to
    the international community with the request to acknowledge formally,
    by parliamentary resolutions and similar official statements, the
    crime as a historic fact. The most prominent ex-ample of genocide
    'recognized' by an increasing number of parliaments and yet 'de-nied'
    by the legislative and government of the Turkish Republic is the case
    of the an-nihilation of the Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire
    during 1915/16.

    This article is a critical assessment of the motion, issued
    unanimously by the German Bundestag on June 16, 2005 (Printed Paper
    15/5689). The authors discuss the motifs and legal implication of
    this implicit German version of genocide recognition, which avoids
    the term genocide, but is explicit in admitting Germany's
    co-respon-sibility for the 'annihilation' of the Armenian citizens of
    the Ottoman Empire. Beside genocide recognition, the penalization of
    genocide denial is yet another main concern of communities of
    genocide survivors and their descendants. Here, the authors explain
    the meaning of genocide denial and explore the surprisingly poor
    'equipment' of the German penal law situation, which has no other
    tools to counter qualified genocide denial than §§ 130 (3) and 185
    (German Penal Code), which prosecute denial of the NS genocide crimes
    as insult, or protect the memory of de-ceased persons from insult (§
    189). The authors also analyse whether the penalization of qualified
    genocide denial under the German penal law infringes the basic and
    human rights of free opinion, as stated in the German constitution
    (Grundgesetz article 5 [1]).

    In conclusion, the authors compare the German situation with the
    legal state of af-fairs in other EU member states such as Spain and
    France. Quoting the contradicting governmental opinion of Turkey and
    of dissident Turkish human rights defenders, as articulated at the
    occasion of a debate in the French National Assembly (May 18, 2006)
    about a bill on the legal prosecution of genocide denial, the authors
    predict in-tensified differences between the liberty of speech and
    opinion and the protection against genocide denial as the 'second
    killing' (Elie Wiesel).

    GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies / Leibniz-Institut
    für Globale und Regionale Studien Neuer Jungfernstieg 21 · 20354
    Hamburg · Germany Tel. : +49 (0)40 - 428 25-593 · Fax : +49 (0)40 -
    428 25-547 URL : www.giga-hamburg.de

    http://www.armenews.com/artic le.php3?id_article=28044
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