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Ankara: Turkish Intellectuals Dismayed By Swiss Court's Genocide Rul

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  • Ankara: Turkish Intellectuals Dismayed By Swiss Court's Genocide Rul

    TURKISH INTELLECTUALS DISMAYED BY SWISS COURT'S GENOCIDE RULING

    Today's Zaman
    23 October 2008, Thursday
    Turkey

    A Swiss court's ruling against three Turks for their denial of
    allegations of an Armenian genocide has drawn ire from liberal
    intellectuals in Turkey, including Professor Baskın Oran.

    The court, in Winterthur, ordered Workers Party (Ä°P) Europe
    representative Ali Mercan to pay a fine of 4,500 Swiss francs
    ($3,900). Two others were ordered to pay 3,600 Swiss francs each for
    violating anti-racism legislation.

    During a demonstration in June of last year, Mercan had denied Armenian
    claims of genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. The other two
    Turks were co-organizers of the demonstration.

    "Now, wait and see how this massive attack on the freedom of expression
    will strengthen fascists in Turkey and elsewhere, and how non-Muslims,
    Alevis, Kurds, leftists and liberals will suffer more under this
    heavy blow. Maybe this is what is being aimed at by certain circles,"
    Oran wrote for a discussion network on the Internet.

    Oran himself was prosecuted two years ago under infamous Article 301
    of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK) on charges of "insulting Turkishness"
    for a report on minorities and cultural reports he had prepared for the
    Prime Ministry. The report maintained that Turkey's understanding of
    minority rights lagged behind universal norms and proposed far-reaching
    amendments to the Constitution and related laws. He was acquitted of
    the charges but continued to be threatened by radical groups.

    "I cannot see any difference between our courts, which are punishing
    people who are saying 'genocide,' and the Swiss court. Actually,
    the Swiss court is even guiltier than ours because their tradition of
    freedom of speech is stronger than ours," Oran said in an interview
    with Today's Zaman. He also pointed out that the Swiss court's verdict
    would have a negative effective on freedom of speech in Turkey, since
    the circles that already oppose freedoms will use the verdict to show
    that there are limitations to freedom of speech even in a European
    country like Switzerland.

    "In the present situation it is totally impossible to get rid of
    Article 301," Oran added.

    In the past there have been many court cases against intellectuals
    under the article. As part of Turkey's ongoing European Union accession
    process, the government amended the law and introduced a requirement
    under which prosecutors must seek authorization from the Ministry of
    Justice before initiating a court case under the article.

    Yusuf AlataÅ~_, a lawyer and a former chairman of the Human Rights
    Association (Ä°HD), stressed that in Europe the borders of freedom
    of thought are determined by racism but that the verdict of the Swiss
    court was against freedom of speech.

    "There is no conclusion from any international body regarding the
    genocide. Until there is such a decision, it is normal that some people
    will claim that it is genocide and others will argue the opposite,"
    AlataÅ~_ said.

    --Boundary_(ID_m7YUAFLSR97O9dWehsWXwQ)--
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