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French National Assembly Makes Denial Of The Armenian Genocide A Pun

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  • French National Assembly Makes Denial Of The Armenian Genocide A Pun

    FRENCH NATIONAL ASSEMBLY MAKES DENIAL OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE A PUNISHABLE OFFENCE
    By Peter Schwarz

    World Socialist Web Site, MI
    Oct 18 2006

    The decision by the French National Assembly to make denial of the
    genocide of Armenians in 1915 a punishable offence is a reactionary
    provocation.

    The prohibition primarily serves domestic purposes. In line with the
    ongoing campaign against Islam, this latest ban uses religious and
    ethnic issues to divert attention from increasing social tensions.

    The new bill does absolutely nothing to help explain one of the
    darkest chapters in the history of the last century. Quite the
    contrary, the intrusion by criminal law into historical debate is
    an attack on free speech and actually obstructs the clarification of
    historical questions.

    The law, which was passed by the National Assembly last Thursday by
    106 votes to 19, threatens those who deny the genocide of Armenians
    during the Ottoman empire with one year in prison and a fine of 45,000
    euros. The new law supplements a law unanimously passed by the National
    Assembly in 2001, which officially recognised the genocide conducted
    against the Armenians.

    The new law was introduced by the main opposition party, the Socialist
    Party. Forty Socialist deputies voted in favour of the bill with two
    voting against. The law was also supported by the French Stalinist
    Communist Party (PCF).

    The Gaullist government rejected the law on the basis of foreign
    policy considerations. But the governing UMP (Union for a Popular
    Movement) cleared the way for the law by freeing its deputies from
    party discipline and recommending non-participation at the vote. In
    the event, 49 UMP deputies, led by former minister Patrick Devedjian,
    who is of Armenian origin, voted for the new bill with 17 voting
    against. The vast majority of the Assembly's 577 deputies did not
    attend the vote.

    In order to become law the bill has to be agreed by the second
    chamber, the Senate. It is up to the government to decide if and when
    it introduces the bill into the Senate and it may well be the case
    that this will never happen. Nevertheless, the vote by the National
    Assembly has already had significant consequences.

    Reaction has been particularly pronounced in Turkey, which has its own
    law making the opposite claim, i.e., affirmation of the genocide of
    1915, a punishable offence. The extreme-right Nationalist Movement
    Party (MHP) had organized demonstrations against the French bill
    even before the vote was taken. Other organizations have called for
    a boycott on French goods and the Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan has
    threatened to retaliate with economic sanctions, including calling
    off a planned French-Turkish armaments deal, and a ban on French bids
    to construct a nuclear power plant.

    Significantly opposition movements and representatives of the Armenian
    community in Turkey have also condemned the French law. They fear
    that it plays into the hands of right-wing, nationalist forces and
    could provoke repressive measures against the Armenian people.

    They are also opposed to the fact that France wants to enforce
    recognition of the Armenian genocide with the same measures Turkey
    is utilising denying it-i.e., penal law.

    "How can we in future argue against laws that forbid us to talk about
    a genocide if France, for its part, now does the same thing? That
    is completely irrational," commentated Hrant Dink, publisher of
    the Armenian Turkish weekly Argos. Dink, who was condemned to six
    months in prison on probation last year over the Armenian question,
    and currently faces renewed repression over the issue, has even
    threatened to go to France and, contrary to his own opinion, deny
    the genocide in defiance of the new law.

    Another Armenian journalist, Etyen Mahcupyan, from the daily paper
    Zaman, sees a danger that the tenuous discussion begun in Turkey
    over the Armenia question could be jeopardised by the French law. For
    the first time ever a congress has been held in Istanbul to publicly
    discuss the Armenian question. Mahcupyan warned: "The action of the
    French parliament brings the Turkish population nearer to the state,
    which can then manipulate them more easily."

    Prominent historians in France have also expressed their vehement
    opposition to the law. In a statement entitled "Freedom for history"
    they condemned the law as an attack on the "freedom of expression."

    The law served to reduce "teachers once more to the status of
    hostages."

    The French government and the European Commission have expressed
    objections to the law because they fear a deterioration of relations
    with Turkey. There is much at stake for French businesses. Should
    Erdogan stick to his threat then orders of up to 14 billion euros
    are at risk. Additional losses could be recorded by the French
    supermarket chain Carrefour, which has a substantial share of the
    market in Turkey, as well as the auto concern Renault, which has a
    big factory near Istanbul.

    Nevertheless, all this has not prevented the National Assembly from
    passing a law that punishes undesirable opinions on an event which
    took place 90 years ago and in which France played no substantial role.

    The only other similar law in France is one which forbids any denial of
    the Holocaust, in which the French Vichy regime did play an important
    role. Other crimes with much more immediate relevance-such as the
    torture and massacres carried out by French colonialism in Algeria
    and Indochina-are not subject to legal sanction and are occasionally
    officially denied.

    Just last winter, when the government sought to pass a law emphasising
    the "positive role" of French colonial policy in school textbooks,
    the Socialist Party argued that parliament had no right to issue
    laws dealing with history and that politicians could not determine
    historical issues. Now they have thrown this principle overboard and
    are doing the same themselves.

    Why this law?

    The principal aim of the new law is to garner electoral support. Both
    Segol ène Royal and Nicolas Sarkozy, the probable candidates of the
    Socialist Party and the UMP for the presidential elections next year,
    have declared their support for the new law. Both candidates are
    seeking to win support from the approximately half million Armenians
    living in France, the majority of whom back the law.

    However there is more at stake than the Armenian electorate. The new
    law is also aimed against Turkey's plans to join the European Union.

    President Chirac led the way in this respect 10 days ago when, during
    an official trip to the Armenian capital of Yerevan, he declared
    that Turkey must recognize the genocide of the Armenians before being
    accepted into the European Union-a condition that the European Union
    does not require.

    Right-wing politicians throughout Europe have used agitation against
    Turkish membership in the European Union as a means of mobilising
    backward layers of the electorate. In a similar manner to the current
    campaign being waged against immigrants and Muslims this question is
    being exploited to encourage xenophobia and divert social fears and
    tension away from the ruling elite. While Conservative politicians
    generally argue for the "defence of the Christian civilisation,"
    French socialists are using the Armenian question for the same purpose.

    The fact that the French Socialist Party has undertaken such an
    initiative with the active support of the Communist Party speaks
    volumes over the extent of the decline of these organizations. Unable
    to provide any sort of answer to the growing social crisis, they are
    both playing the card of xenophobia.

    The officer's daughter Segol ène Royal, who has been systematically
    groomed by the media as the Socialist presidential candidate, has
    sought on a number of occasions to outflank her UMP rival Nicolas
    Sarkozy on the right-for example with her appeal to entrust the army
    with the education of rebellious young people. She has now gone even
    further with her advocacy of the Armenian law.

    As usual the Communist Party is seeking to shout even louder.

    Communist deputy Frederic Dutoit praised the new law before the
    National Assembly as an "immense progress for the Armenian cause
    and for humanity as a whole." He then threatened, "It is a first
    step, others must follow." The newspaper La Marseillaise, which has
    close links to the PCF, celebrated the "prohibition of denial" as an
    "expression of respect for universal values." In the world of the
    French Stalinists censorship remains the highest form of freedom!

    Following a series of strike movements and revolts in recent years
    directed at both Gaullist and Socialist Party-led governments, the
    Socialist and Communist parties are prepared to go to any lengths to
    prevent a further intensification of social protest.

    --Boundary_(ID_FIVFUo4sSOuQWAJNfCjviw)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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