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ANKARA: Perincek Before Swiss Court, Supporters Not Admitted

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  • ANKARA: Perincek Before Swiss Court, Supporters Not Admitted

    PERINCEK BEFORE SWISS COURT, SUPPORTERS NOT ADMITTED

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 7 2007

    The leader of the neo-nationalist Turkish Workers' Party (ÝP), Doðu
    Perincek, went on trial in the Swiss city of Lausanne for calling
    the alleged genocide of Armenians in 1915 an "international lie"
    during Turkish rallies in Lausanne two years ago.

    Nevertheless, 160 members of the Talat Pasha Committee who traveled
    to Lausanne in show of support to Perincek were not allowed to enter
    the court hall, as well as the Turkish journalists who wanted to
    watch the trial.

    The Talat Pasha Committee, which aims at combating Armenian
    allegations, is named after an Ottoman interior minister whom Armenians
    claim had a key role in the alleged Armenian genocide.

    Talat Pasha was killed in 1921 by an Armenian gunman in Berlin.

    A Swiss official said the Turkish group -- most of whom were wearing
    red scarves and waving Turkish flags -- should have had written
    accreditation earlier from Swiss authorities to enter the court,
    the Anatolia news agency reported, noting that meanwhile, a group
    of Swiss and foreign journalists based in Switzerland and a group of
    Armenians living in Switzerland were allowed to enter the court hall.

    The trial, which started yesterday, will continue for four days,
    the agency also reported from Lausanne.

    Among Perincek's supporters was Rauf Denktaþ, the first and former
    president of Turkish Cyprus. "We're not going [to Switzerland] for
    enmity, we're going to see whether we can lay the foundations of a
    friendship ... In order to be friends, parties should avoid insults. We
    hope that cantons and governments in Switzerland eventually draw
    the conclusion that a years-long smear campaign is not something
    necessary for world peace," Denktaþ said on Monday ahead of his
    departure for Switzerland.

    If found guilty, Perincek will be the first person sentenced under
    Switzerland's anti-racism law for denying the alleged genocide. In the
    past, a Bern court acquitted 12 Turks facing similar charges in 2001.

    Turkey vehemently denies that Armenian subjects under its predecessor
    the Ottoman Empire were victims of genocide. Facing a mounting Armenian
    campaign to get international recognition for the alleged genocide,
    Turkey called for a joint committee of Turkish and Armenian experts
    in 2005 to study the allegations. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan
    sent a letter to Armenian President Robert Kocharian proposing the
    establishment of such a committee. Nevertheless, Yerevan hasn't given
    a positive answer to Ankara's proposal up to date, instead arguing
    that such a committee should be inter-governmental.

    American historian Professor Justin McCarthy was also in Lausanne
    yesterday in order to stand before the court as a witness for the
    defendant. McCarthy has become a well-known name in Turkish public
    opinion in recent years.

    McCarthy said at the time that the source known as the "Blue Book,"
    chosen by Armenians to prove their claims of genocide, was one
    of the products of the British war propaganda bureau's efforts at
    misinformation during World War I. Turkey also argues that Armenian
    allegations in the book, formally titled "The Treatment of Armenians
    in the Ottoman Empire, 1915-1916," are not factually supported and
    the book as a whole was wartime propaganda by the British.

    --Boundary_(ID_XZBSx/9ZXpEn9Si02C1SjQ)--
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