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  • Document Sent To Members Of The French National Assembly And FrenchC

    DOCUMENT SENT TO MEMBERS OF THE FRENCH NATIONAL ASSEMBLY AND FRENCH CABINET MINISTERS

    AZG Armenian Daily
    25/05/2006

    Laws against Genocide Denial: Potential Consequences for Human Rights

    May 18, 2006: Today the French National Assembly was set to debate a
    bill to criminalize the denial of the Armenian Genocide, but has now
    postponed the debate to November. The Turkish ambassador to France was
    temporarily recalled in protest of this bill. What are the implications
    of the French law for Turkish-Armenian relations and freedom of speech?

    The International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, of
    which I am currently the chair, deals with genocide in a comparative
    manner, including its causes, methods, aftermath and denial. Our
    research, based on archival sources both in and outside Turkey,
    confirms that over a million Armenians perished in an Ottoman
    state-sponsored campaign between 1915 and 1923 as victims of genocide.

    Kemal Ataturk, the founder the new Turkish Republic, also publicly
    disapproved of the wrongs committed against the Armenians, calling
    them "a shameful act," but the true story of other founding fathers
    of modern Turkey, many of whom had been intimately involved in the
    Armenian Genocide as perpetrators, was suppressed.

    This was despite the fact that the Ottoman government itself found
    the leaders of the Young Turk party guilty in absentia of crimes
    against the Armenians.

    Ever since then, successive Turkish governments have denied what they
    euphemistically called "the events of 1915."

    In this respect, I wrote to Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan on May
    5, 2005, regarding his proposal for a joint group, consisting of
    historians and other experts, to study "the events of 1915." I found
    this proposal insincere, given the Turkish state's numerous attempts to
    stifle open discussion of the Armenian Genocide, including prosecuting
    over seventy scholars, writers, journalists and publishers on the
    grounds that they were denigrating Turkey. In that letter, I made
    the following points.

    "...the two sides must listen to and hear each other. As part
    of this process, a common body of knowledge needs to be created,
    so that established facts can help alleviate the polarization of
    opinions. This, in turn, will lead to the "peaceful and friendly
    environment in which tolerance and mutual respect shall prevail."

    [Note, quote taken from P.M. Erdogan's proposal.]

    I then urged that his government take some simple steps to allow
    for a free and open discussion within Turkish society, such as those
    listed below.

    1) Facilitate critical scholars educating society about the events of
    1915 from different points of view and not only from the government's
    perspective.

    2) Allow the broadcast of a series of lectures on this issue by
    renowned Armenian, Turkish and/or third party scholars, who do not
    necessarily reflect the government's official position, through
    Turkish television networks, without any censorship, and with the
    accessibility to the public for questions.

    3) Allow Turkish academics and intellectuals, whose point of view
    challenges the official version of what happened in 1915, to express
    their ideas through public lectures, publications, and translations of
    Ottoman archival materials, without fear of persecution by the state.

    I also asked the government to make it unequivocally and publicly
    clear that Article 305 of the Penal Code should not criminalize ideas
    which deviate from those of the state's defined position, such as
    the Armenian Genocide issue, and that individuals who say that the
    Armenians suffered a genocide will not be persecuted by the state.

    The proposed new legislation is intended to give force to the law
    passed in 2001 officially recognizing the Genocide by providing
    penalties for those engaged in its denial. One should question how
    this law, if adopted, would facilitate dialogue between the Armenians
    and Turks, which is a stated objective of the 2001 law, or between
    the French and the Turks?

    Does not this law inadvertently provide new opportunities for the
    reactionary elements of Turkish state and society to radicalize the
    masses against the French and the Armenians? By using the French law,
    which limits freedom of speech as an example, would the Turkish state
    not justify laws that promote its policy of denial and therefore make
    it even harder to deviate from the official government position on
    history? If so, how does that help Turkish civil society in gaining
    any awareness on this issue? Does this law advance the language of
    reconciliation or the language of conflict? Can such laws bring
    a solution to the problem, or do they become part of the problem
    themselves? Does using the penal code in France for any limitation
    on the discussion of historical events endanger the prime function
    of scholars, writers and journalists-to analyze, question, and
    debate issues?

    Would it not create a slippery slope that would allow the state to
    sanction and impose dogmas as to how society should think? Finally, is
    this not the very method of limiting freedom of speech that countries
    like Turkey use, as the state attempts to control history in order
    to control society?

    Of course, we do need laws to protect against such problems as racism
    and neo-Nazism, and there are legal limits to freedom of speech, such
    as libel, fraud, defamation. Therefore, those who argue that freedom
    of speech is not absolute are absolutely right. Some observers have
    argued that you can not have a law criminalizing Holocaust denial and
    not allow a similar law for denying the Armenian Genocide, which is
    officially recognized as genocide in France.

    The Holocaust denial policy grew out of two things: many European
    countries were complicit in the death of the Jews, and punishing
    denial of the Holocaust is seen as a form of atonement; and there
    was a fear that neo-Nazi and other fascist groups would try to
    vindicate themselves by eliminating the Holocaust, while maintaining
    racism. Thus, the idea was that suppression of fascism was in part
    a matter of suppressing denial of the Holocaust.

    On the level of principle, one could argue either for or against
    treating all denial of genocide as equal.

    But there is the historical context of the Holocaust denial laws that
    is different from Armenia, Rwanda, etc. At the same time, if only
    the Holocaust cannot be legally denied, then some will take this to
    mean that only the Holocaust was a genocide; others will feel that
    the suffering of their people is being slighted.

    But if we open this up and list all genocides and criminalize denial
    of all of them, then our minds would be enormously constrained by
    the State. Freedom of inquiry, expression, thought would be limited
    in ways that are totally unnecessary and unintended.

    Accordingly, are laws such as this a mistake and contrary to freedom
    of speech? Some might argue that governments should eliminate all
    cases of prosecution of denial, rather than extend the net.

    We know Turkey already requires its students to write essays denying
    the Armenian Genocide and uses its penal code to stifle human
    rights. As recently as three days ago, an opposition deputy in the
    Turkish Grand National Assembly presented a bill stipulating prison
    terms of up to three years for those who claim that Turkey committed
    genocide against Armenians in 1915. (This bill is not very different
    from the current Turkish Penal Code article (301) that criminalizes
    "denigrating Turkishness," which is what claiming there was a genocide
    of the Armenians apparently does.) If the bill passes, what would
    happen to Turkish intellectuals like Taner Akcam, Murat Belge, Halil
    Berktay, Hrant Dink, Fatma Muge Gocek, Orhan Pamuk, Ragip Zarakolu,
    and others, who openly challenge the Turkish state's definition of
    the Armenian Genocide? Who then would dare attempt to educate Turkish
    civil society? How then would Turkey ever have a chance to become
    democratic? How then are the Armenian and Turkish people going to
    have any kind of dialogue on this issue? If one supports such a law
    in France limiting freedom of speech, then should one not also support
    such a law in Turkey?

    We must do all we can to overcome denial of genocide, by raising
    awareness, employing scholarship, applying reason, and means other
    than state sanction, to defend truth, justice and human rights. We
    must demand that Turkey reform its penal code. The French, German and
    other governments of Europe who were bystanders or even participants
    in the crime should provide resources in order to bring the parties
    together, and give incentives to solve the problem, not widen the
    divide. Denial should be against the law only if it is in the context
    of a hate or racist argument.

    One wonders if these developments can contribute to the peaceful
    solution of the problem. Rather than employ the language of conflict,
    which exacerbates the problem, the parties should be more dispassionate
    and rational, in order to be open to developing other means and
    tools that will help with establishing dialogue, and hopefully lead
    to normalization of relations.

    France, for its part, has an option, as well. Instead of criminalizing
    Armenian Genocide denial, which serves to stifle freedom of speech,
    it could use its positive influence to support efforts within Turkey
    for democratization there.

    Freedom of speech and debate on the issue of the Armenian Genocide
    in Turkey is the best hope for eliminating government control of this
    history. By allowing such debate, Turkey can become open, democratic
    and pluralistic. There is no guarantee that Turkey will follow suit,
    but France, with its legacy of "freedom, equality and brotherhood,"
    and as one of the world's leaders in democracy and human rights,
    must show the way by not itself imposing laws that penalize freedom
    of speech on the Armenian Genocide or any historical event.

    By Roger W. Smith, Professor Emeritus of Government, College of William
    and Mary and Chairman, International Institute for Genocide and Human
    Rights Studies.
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