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Armenian Genocide Case: Free Speech, Or Human Rights Breach?

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  • Armenian Genocide Case: Free Speech, Or Human Rights Breach?

    Inquisitr
    Jan 30 2015

    Armenian Genocide Case: Free Speech, Or Human Rights Breach?


    On January 28, 2015, the European Court of Human Rights convened in
    Strasbourg in the Armenian genocide case of Dogu Perincek -vs-
    Switzerland. As TIME reports, while visiting Switzerland in 2005,
    Perincek, Chairman of Turkey's Worker's Party, called the 1915 killing
    spree which claimed the lives of 1.5 million Armenians an
    "international lie."

    TIME reports that in 2007, the Swiss court fined Perincek on the
    grounds that his statement violated that country's laws prohibiting
    genocide denial. Perincek filed and won an appeal on the grounds that
    the decision violated his right to free speech. Switzerland then
    rebutted with a counter appeal, dealing another blow in the semantic
    cage match that is the Armenian Genocide case.

    As the Armenian Weekly reports, Perincek's lawyer Mehmet Cengiz
    defended his client's right to free speech, arguing his statements
    were a "legal assessment" of the events of 1915 and should not be
    taken as "racist." His client never denied the massacres themselves,
    he explained, but merely resented their labelling as "genocide." "The
    dispute between the parties concerns the legal definition of the
    tragic events that took place 100 years ago," Cengiz argued.

    Perincek chimed in, maintaining to the ECHR that "Freedom of
    expression means liberty for different, even deviating opinions."

    Representing the Swiss government and Armenia as a third party,
    Doughty Street Chamber attorney Geoffrey Robertson cautioned against
    genocide denial, claiming it "can make genocide survivors and their
    children and grandchildren feel the worthlessness and contempt and
    inferiority that the initial perpetrators intended."

    In a now widely circulated video, Doughty Street barister Amal
    Alamuddin Clooney, who recently gained fame when she married George
    Clooney (for more on this click here), evoked the horrors of the 1915
    mass murders. She spoke of the beheadings, the death marches, the
    concentration camp, the bloody Euphrates swelled with corpses. She
    reminded the courts of the "90 kilos of evidence" it had examined
    proving the occurrence of the killings and quoted the German
    ambassador to Turkey who condemned the latter for seeking the "total
    obliteration of the Armenians."

    "Armenia is not here to argue against freedom of expression anymore
    than Turkey is here to defend it," Clooney stated, once again exposing
    the absurdity of the semantics debate that has characterized the
    Armenian Genocide case. She closed with the most astute observation
    that the primary perpetrators of the massacres that nearly
    exterminated the entire Armenian race had been sentenced to death for
    mass murder, not genocide, simply because the word "genocide" had yet
    to be invented at the time of their trial.

    A verdict has yet to be released.


    http://www.inquisitr.com/1795032/the-armenian-genocide-case-free-speech-or-human-rights-breach/


    From: Baghdasarian
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