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ANKARA: German bid for EU law on Holocaust deniers faces resistance

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  • ANKARA: German bid for EU law on Holocaust deniers faces resistance

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 30 2007

    German bid for European Union law on Holocaust deniers faces
    resistance


    EU term president Germany's proposal to punish Holocaust deniers in
    all 27 member countries has been facing opposition from many fronts.
    The Armenian lobby is also asking that the Armenian `genocide' be
    included in the draft.
    While member countries such as Britain, Italy and Denmark oppose the
    draft on the basis of freedom of expression, historians object to the
    idea as a form of censorship. While trying to convince these two
    fronts, Germany now has Baltic countries seeking the inclusion of
    Stalin-era crimes in the draft, which Germany is lukewarm on. Turkey
    has been closely following the developments, waiting for the draft to
    be clarified.
    German diplomats, speaking to Today's Zaman, say there is no
    reference to any historical event in the draft but cautions that the
    topic will soon be discussed at the level of the Committee of
    Permanent Representatives (COREPER). Diplomats cannot say whether the
    Armenian question will be eventually included or not. The draft,
    whose full name is the Framework Decision on Combating Racism and
    Xenophobia, aims at penalizing the deniers of the Holocaust, war
    crimes and crimes against humanity in all 27 member countries.
    Germany, which currently holds the rotating EU presidency, wants to
    revive an initiative started by Luxembourg back in 2005 for tougher
    laws on the incitement of racial hatred and historical revisionism.
    This includes `the denial or gross minimization of genocide out of
    racist and xenophobic motives.'
    Germany outlined the main points of the draft in a press statement
    released on Monday:
    Public incitement to hatred and violence for reasons of racism or
    xenophobia will be criminalized. This applies in all cases for
    conduct that constitutes threats, insults or defamatory statements,
    and for conduct that is apt to disturb the public peace. The
    dissemination of writings with such content will be prohibited as
    well. The maximum penalty for such conduct will be at least one to
    three years in prison.
    Public approval, denial or gross minimization of genocide, crimes
    against humanity and war crimes within the meaning or Articles 6, 7
    and 8 of the Statute of the International Criminal Court ('Rome
    Statute') and pursuant to Article 6 of the International Military
    Tribunal of 1945 (Nuremberg Tribunal) against a group of persons or a
    member of such a group, defined according to the criteria of race,
    color, religion, descent, or national or ethnic origin, will be
    criminalized. Here as well, the maximum penalty will be at least one
    to three years in prison.
    The Framework Decision does not identify specific cases of genocide,
    crimes against humanity or war crimes; rather, it refers to the
    Statute of the International Criminal Court and the International
    Military Tribunal of 1945 and thus creates abstract offenses. Whether
    a concrete historic crime falls within these definitions would be
    decided by a court in each concrete and specific case. This occurred,
    for example, with regard to the Holocaust. Pursuant to the Draft,
    Member States have the possibility of making criminal liability
    dependent upon the determination by a national or international court
    that a concrete historic event constituted genocide, a crime against
    humanity or a war crime.
    European Commission Vice President Franco Frattini, in a written
    declaration on Jan. 27, lent full support to the German proposal.
    However, Frattini's country Italy, drafted a law that proposes
    penalties up to three years in jail for inciting racial hatred but
    stops short of making Holocaust denial a crime. Some 200 Italian
    historians have objected to the draft.

    31.01.2007

    SELÇUK GÜLTAŞLI BRUSSELS
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