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  • Turk convicted of genocide denial

    MWC News, Canada
    March 9 2007

    Turk convicted of genocide denial


    By Agencies

    Perincek called the mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in
    1915 'an international lie' [AFP]

    A court in Switzerland has found Dogu Perincek, head of the Turkish
    Workers' Party, guilty of denying that mass killings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks in 1915 amounted to genocide.

    Perincek was given a 90-day suspended jail sentence and fined 3,000
    Swiss francs ($2,461) on Friday in the first such conviction in the
    country.

    The 65-year-old politician, whose party has no seats in the Turkish
    parliament, called the Armenian genocide "an international lie"
    during a speech in the Swiss city of Lausanne in July 2005.

    He was convicted under a 1995 law which bans denying, belittling or
    justifying any genocide.

    Perincek, who submitted 90kg of historical documents in his defence,
    argued there had been no genocide against the Armenians, but that
    there had been "reciprocal massacres".

    Armenian deaths

    Armenia says about 1.5 million Armenians died in the killings, while
    Turkey says the deaths were the result of inter-ethnic fighting,
    disease and famine in which both sides suffered.

    "This decision that was taken by the tribunal ... is a racist
    decision, an imperialist decision. This decision is against our
    country our history and our nation," Memet Bedri, vice-president of
    the Turkish Workers' Party, told Al Jazeera.

    It was the first time that Switzerland's 1995 anti-racism law has
    been applied to the massacre of Armenians, Doris Angst of
    Switzerland's official anti-racism watchdog, said.

    Tamar Hacoyan of Switzerland's Armenian association, welcomed the
    court's verdict.

    "We feel very relieved with this decision because this is the first
    time, at a world level, that a court has decided that the Armenian
    genocide is without doubt," she said.

    In 2001, a court in the capital Bern acquitted 12 Turks facing
    similar charges.

    However, two years later the Swiss lower house of parliament formally
    recognised the massacre of Armenians during the First World War as
    genocide, despite fierce protests from Turkey.
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