Free Speech Fades Away: France and the New Repression

Telos Press, NY
Oct 14 2006

Free Speech Fades Away:
France and the New Repression

by Russell Berman ·

The action of the French National Assembly, to criminalize any
statements that deny that the mass killings of Armenians during and
after the First World War constituted genocide, raises many problems,
but foremost among them is the threat to free speech.

To be sure, this bill is not yet law, and it may never become law.
While the vote was lopsided in favor (106 to 19), most of the
577-member chamber did not vote at all. Nor is it likely that the
proposal will proceed successfully through the upper house or be
adopted by the Chirac government, which has criticized it. When all
is said and done, this may have only been an electoral ploy by the
Left (which supported the bill): it is a way to jump on the popular
bandwagon against the expansion of the EU to include Turkey, without
fishing in the racist waters of the far right or adopting theological
arguments about a Christian Europe. It’s ideologically easier to
irritate the Turks through a symbolic gesture about Armenia, in the
hope that an irritated Turkey will then turn away from Europe.

Or perhaps the French socialists were just angling for the Armenian
vote (a large community in France).

Nonetheless the matter needs to be taken on face-value as well.
Whatever the ulterior motives, the important chamber of a major
parliamentary democracy has now declared certain speech acts,
historical claims, to be so inimical to the values of society that
they would warrant incarceration and a significant monetary fine.
This was not a matter of the National Assembly declaring its own
esteemed understanding of early twentieth-century history in a
hypothetical statement that might have condemned the genocide. Nor
does this involve a judgment on statements of whether or not the
killings took place (as in standard Holocaust denial). Rather, the
newly defined crime would involve the articulation of doubts as to
whether such killing "rose" to the level of genocide. While – to make
my position clear – this author accepts the historiographical consensus
that the catastrophe that befell the Armenians was indeed genocide,
the logic of freezing such debate through a criminalization of
expressions of alternative opinion seems dangerous indeed. Dangerous
because it will necessarily poison the atmosphere around this
question between Turks and Armenians; dangerous because it sets a
precedent of providing legislative sanction to matters of
historiographical judgment; but also, and most importantly dangerous
because the august stage of the National Assembly of the French
Republic has now become the most prominent venue to date on which the
value of free speech has come under such systematic attack.

Given the tendency in European jurisprudence toward universal
jurisdiction – the capacity of Spanish courts to sit in judgment on
Latin American matters or for a suit against former Israeli Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon to be brought in Belgium – we can imagine the
long shadow of such a French law stretching all the way to Istanbul.
If, for example, a journalist in Turkey were to question the genocide
hypothesis and then later travel to France, the French police might
subsequently be obligated to arrest him: for speech crimes
"committed" on another continent. The tragic absurdity of this attack
on free speech became sublimely clear through a breathtaking accident
of fate: on the very same day, Thursday, October 12, that the
National Assembly decided to prohibit certain statements about the
treatment of Armenians by Turkey, it was announced that the 2006
Nobel Prize for Literature would be awarded to Orhan Pamuk, the
Turkish author who has had to face prosecution in his homeland
for – statements about the treatment of Armenians by Turkey.

Of course the statements at stake are diametrically opposed: the
French hope to criminalize doubt about the status of the killing as
genocide, while Pamuk was accused of making statements which,
acknowledging the killings, cast aspersion on Turkey. If there is a
spirit in history, could it have been any clearer in its
demonstration of the equally reprehensible character of restrictions
on free speech, whether from the Left (Paris) or the Right (Turkey)?
If the French Republic can engage in this sort of thoughtless
repression, it loses any moral high ground in the other debates of
the age. There is no longer any basis on which to condemn the claims,
for example, that the Mohammed cartoons should have been censored.
The leaders of European liberty turn out to have a capacity for
repression akin if not identical to the crowds who attacked Danish
embassies in retaliation for the publication of the cartoons or the
Somali killers who displayed their brave manhood by shooting a nun in
the back because of the statements of Benedict XVI.

The geography of liberty is shifting. For all the profound
differences between the European West and the Islamic world, it is no
longer a matter of simply mapping freedom and repression onto the
opposite poles. There is a repression a foot in the heart of the West
that wears away at the superficial evaluation of a binary clash of
civilizations. In that clash, the West is now sliding toward an
imitation of the enemy it imagines. Indeed the same logic plays out
across the Atlantic: as Europe steps away from free speech, it
reproduces the measures of repression that it loves to discover and
denounce in American policies. The real story of the day is precisely
this spread of repression and the erosion of liberty in all regions,
as Jean-Claude Paye suggests in his work that has appeared in Telos
and in his forthcoming Telos Press book, The Global War on Liberty.

The decision of the National Assembly to police discussions about the
history of the First World War and the proper terminology in the
characterization of the violence against the Armenians betrays a
wider rhetorical crime. As Norman Naimark shows in Telos 136, the
term genocide was a contested and then restricted neologism. The
Soviet Union, in particular, was eager to limit its usage and to
exclude mass killings associated with social class. The term was
damaged at its moment of inception; facing any real genocide,
governments run away from the characterization. Hence the obsessively
careful parsing of the term in the debates around Darfur. Designating
mass killing as "genocide" might obligate world opinion to take some
action, so it is therefore avoided – it is precisely also therefore
easy for the National Assembly to take a heroic stance on a genocidal
war long since concluded, ninety years too late, while the world
twiddles its thumbs in the face of the real genocide in Darfur. Dare
one imagine that the National Assembly might have alternatively
considered criminalizing genocide-denial in Africa and then request
that the Interior Minister Sarkozy arrest the Sudanese government?
Not to mention the systematic killings carried out by governments in
Iran and North Korea. No National Assembly votes on these topics, odd
as it may sound. The political class picks its fights, while it is
engaged in a routinized bureaucratic politics, solely semiotic,
without action or responsibility. Yet this lack of sincerity or
ardor, this pale skin of apathy, chills the political culture, and
liberty flickers. Not brave enough to attack the genocides and mass
killings of our own day, the National Assembly cowers in historicism
and sacrifices free speech without a second thought. It is a farce
that has become tragic.

As free speech becomes illegal, free speakers have to live like
criminals. This brings us again to the case of Robert Redeker, an
author, philosopher and teacher, discussed here previously and widely
elsewhere: after publishing an article critical of aspects of Islam,
he received numerous death threats, his address was posted on
jihadist websites, and he is now in hiding, under police protection.
While the notables of the French Republic condemned his persecution,
in fact the defense they offered was at best lukewarm, and often came
close to an apology for his would-be killers.. A compelling
commentary appeared on an adamantly secularist and atheistic French
website, parts of which are worth translating here:

In the face of this Islamic fascism, the least one can say is that
observed support [for Redeker] is far from what might have been
expected. The National Minister of Education, Gilles de Robien,
committed the infamy of declaring that while he can affirm his
"solidarity" with the teacher, "a functionary must behave prudently
and moderation in all circumstances." (Le Figaro, September 29,
2006).

In other words, the teacher as a "functionary" has no claim on a
space outside the job where he might think or act as a citizen.

The political class has led the defenders of liberty to expect such
treason since the affair around the Mohammed caricatures. Jacques
Chirac, Dominique de Villepin and Francois Bayrou certainly declared
their unwavering attachment to the liberty of expression, while also
limiting it by a need to respect religious beliefs. It gets worse:
after the fatwa issued by the Ayatollah Khomeini which condemned
Salman Rushdie to death, Jacques Chirac declared his contempt for
Rushdie and broadcast his understanding for the Muslim masses who
felt that their faith had been insulted (L’Humanité, March 21, 1995);
while he certainly condemned the calls for Rushdie’s murder, he also
condemned "all those who use blasphemy for commercial purposes"
(France 5). In the same vein, when [the Bangladeshi poet] Taslima
Nasrin faced death threats in her country, certain opinion-makers in
the French press minimized the events (see Taslima Nasreen, une femme
contre las fanatismes, Sylvie Leprince et Benoit Mély, Bibiliothèque
de Travail, 1995). No! Religions are not necessarily respectable when
they participate in a set of authoritarian prescriptions such as
so-called sacred texts. Respect for the right to believe does not
imply respect for the object of such beliefs.

The last is a point at the heart of a free society: respect for your
right to speak does not obligate me to respect the content of your
statements. I may believe firmly that your statements are
reprehensible, without feeling the need that the police arrest you
for speech acts, no matter how valueless they seem. Mutatis mutandis
for religion.

The argument continues with an analysis of a French Left willing to
sacrifice any liberal values in order to participate in a
stereotypical anti-imperialist solidarity. The issue here then is not
Islamic extremists themselves, but the useful idiots who populate
western politics and culture and who consistently refuse to stand up
for liberty.

After Salman Rushdie, Taslima Nasrin, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Theo van Gogh,
the Danish cartoonists and many others, Robert Redeker is a new
victim of Islamic fascism, a religious imperialism which the regular
anti-fascists refuse to recognize as such. For some short-sighted
anti-racists, it is easier to shout "No pasaran!" while brandishing a
placard against [Jean-Marie LePen’s] National Front than to reject
with the same force the identical tyranny of the Qu’ran, currently
being spread on all continents by murder, accusations of blasphemy
and the imposition of the veil. In the same rush into an open grave,
the Greens, the [anti-racist movement] MRAP and [the young Communist
league] JCR demonstrated side by side with veiled Muslims against the
prohibition of the veil in school; meanwhile part of the left, blind
for decades to the crimes of Stalinism, persists in its denials in
the face of Islam. Thus MRAP commented with regard to Redeker that
"provocation leads to the inacceptable" (Libération, September 30,
2006), a line that is, as usual, similar to that of Muslim leaders.

There is a critique of the political leadership, and there is a
critique of the Left, and they are not the same, although both end up
failing to defend liberty in order to pursue a policy of appeasement.
The conservatives around Chirac find Muslim opposition to Rushdie an
opportune cover to regress to their own congenital suspicion of free
artistic expression, while the Left – which one might have hoped would
have been the carrier of a liberal spirit – has been deeply, perhaps
irreversibly broken by its decades of obsequiousness to Stalinism.
There is a kind of political corruption, which can never be cured.
When the Left votes to restrict freedom of speech, because it is
politically useful in the debates around EU expansion, it is simply
reverting to a behavior pattern learned well in the course of its
miserable twentieth century.

What is interesting about this juxtaposition of the two cases – the
criminalization of genocide denial and the betrayal of Redeker – is
that their ostensible political tendencies are quite distinct. The
former might be seen as anti-Turkish, and perhaps implicitly
anti-Islamic; the latter, the refusal to come to Redeker’s defense,
is in tendency at least pro-Islamic (or at least anti-anti-Islamic).
The issue therefore is precisely not the particular tendency but a
creeping erosion of a commitment to liberty across the full range of
the spectrum. This renunciation of freedom has taken the form of a
growing self-censorship throughout the West, and (as Amir Taheri
calls it) a "preemptive obedience" to what is imagined to be Islamic
sensibility. Parts of the West are eager to cave in to Muslim
demands – even if there are no such demands. Islam becomes a pretext
for Western repression.

The Islamic extremism that repeatedly resorts to violence in response
to insults, real and imagined, is undoubtedly a grievous problem. It
is linked to a complex interaction between Islam and the West in this
age of globalization. Yet, this Islamic dynamic is compounded by
another: the lack of will in the West to defend its own freedoms,
values and culture. A predisposition to collapse in the face of
jihadist extremism has resulted from a relativist multiculturalism
that insists on respecting all cultures except our own. Yet it is in
fact even worse: there is a Western retreat from freedom even in the
absence of Muslim objections. This was the case of the banned Mozart
opera in Berlin, and in the removal of the works of art by the
surrealist Hans Bellmer from a gallery in London.

Beyond a doubt, there is certainly a real and dangerous enemy of the
West, ready to hijack planes and explode trains; but there is another
enemy, a logic of fear and repression, which uses Islam as a pretext
to develop a new culture of control. This is the retreat of the West:
unless it becomes willing to defend its freedoms at home, it will
surely not fight for them against an external enemy in the East
because: liberty is indivisible.

ge=news_article&article_id=159

http://www.telospress.com/main/index.php?main_pa

BAKU: `Echo’: What Do We Need Armenian Citizens For?

Democratic Azerbaijan
Oct 14 2006

`Echo’: What Do We Need Armenian Citizens For?
14.10.2006

Baku warns Yerevan against Issue of Armenian Passports for
Azerbaijani Citizens, Living on Occupied Territories
`Issue of Armenian passports for separatists of Nagorni Garabagh may
be evaluated as illegal issue of national documents of Armenia for
citizens of Azerbaijan or as a fact of recognition of Nagorni
Garabagh as state on the part of Yerevan’. Both contradict to peace
process agreements’. Chief of Information Policy Administration and
press of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan, Tair
Tagizade, stated it for `Echo’ on commenting probability of mass
issue of passports by Armenia for citizens of our country, living on
occupied territories. Accordingly to him, anyway taking into account
absence of law on dual citizenship in Armenia, – `these people
remains to be our citizens’.
It should be reminded that early December this year, separatists of
Nagorni Garabagh scheduled to hold referendum on adoption of
Constitution of non-recognized regime. Within the scope of discussion
of the fundamental law project, as Armenian mass media informed,
discussions were held on adoption of law on citizenship of separatist
regime. At the same time, the so-called `law’ envisages principle of
dual citizenship that people living on occupied territories of
Azerbaijan can `freely obtain Armenian passports’.
Armenian mass media make clear that separatists will have passports
of Armenia without law, `however, this business needs some
arrangement’. Thus one cannot exclude that issue of national
passports of Armenia for people on occupied territories will be of
mass nature. And it is not the first case when separatists in
different regions of the world obtain passports of other states. For
example, Russian Federation issues its documents for separatists of
Georgia and Moldova, thus causing protests of officials of these
states.
In turn, chief of administration of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Azerbaijan, T. Tagizade, informs that first of all OSCE Minsk Group
co-chairs should have responded to issue of passports for
separatists. `Such steps can be characterized any way one likes, but
they cannot be called constructive movement on the way of achievement
of acceptable regulation of Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorni-Garabagh
conflict’, T. Tagizade stresses. Ministry of Foreign Affairs
underlines that today the crucial question for Azerbaijan is who of
persons living on occupied territories are citizens of Azerbaijan and
who are not. `As there are people on occupied territories, who came
there after beginning of conflict, what means that they cannot be
citizens of Azerbaijan’, representative of home Foreign Affairs
Ministry said.
Milli Mejlis deputy representing ruling party and member of standing
commission on state security and defense, Aydin Mirzazade, responded
to Armenian initiative more rigidly. Accordingly to him, currently
considerable flow-out of Armenian citizens from the country is
observed, connected with poor economic situation in the country.
`With such developments, the number of people living in Armenia will
be less than that of Russian soldiers serving for military base in
Gumri’, deputy said. He holds that it is not strange that official
Yerevan authorities are attempting to rehabilitate by starting the
game of dual citizenship; they hope to get new citizens-Armenians to
the country. At the same time deputy reminds that Armenian leadership
and different nationalistic groups in Yerevan failed to realize the
project on international recognition of separatist regime in Nagorni
Garabagh. `No doubt it restricts foreign trips of representatives of
Armenian community of Garabagh to a considerable degree’, deputy
holds. In this connection Armenian part rapidly starts dual
citizenship process attempting to provide 50000 representatives of
Armenian diaspora of Nagorni Garabagh with any kind of legal
document.
`But with the first departure to foreign country they don’t want to
return either to occupied territories or to Armenia, wishing to
escape police regime’, deputy said. In addition, Milli Mejlis deputy
reminds that there is no law on dual citizenship in Armenia. `Any
citizen of Azerbaijan becoming citizen of other state, automatically
forfeits ours’, Mirzazade stresses. Thus, in case separatists are
granted citizenship of Armenia, then, accordingly to Milli Mejlis
deputy, `it won’t affect occupied territories, which remain to be
sovereign territories of Azerbaijan’, deputy emphasizes. At the same
time our country currently seeks liberation of occupied territories.
Mirzazade specially underlines that Armenian citizenship is not
prestigious, `everyone understands that sooner or later these
territories will be returned to Azerbaijan’.
`People living on occupied territories will prefer successful
Azerbaijan to backward Armenia’, Milli Mejlis deputy is convinced. He
stresses that even now living standard of Azerbaijan is higher than
in Armenia, `and what will be observed in some years?!’.
As for possible statements that from this date (after issue of
passports (author’s remark) Yerevan will protect rights of its
citizens on occupied territories of Azerbaijan, deputy stresses that
such position will cause misunderstanding: `And what citizens of
Armenia are doing on our territories? We have no diplomatic
relations!’. Accordingly to him, after acquiring citizenship of
Armenia, people living on occupied territories, will turn to be under
jurisdiction of Armenia which has clear frontiers and they
(separatists – author’s remark) will have nothing to do on our
territories, as such illegal form of residence in Azerbaijan will be
punished.
Political scientist and head of center on political innovations and
technologies, Mubariz Ahmadoglu, sees similar tendencies on obtaining
of Russian passports by people living in provinces of neighbor
Georgia in Armenian wish to issue passports for Armenians living on
occupied Azerbaijani territories. `All separatists understand very
well that they will fail to get international recognition’, head of
center says. Political scientist holds that separatists are
attempting to join with other states. At the same time, he points
that political authority of Armenia and Russia at international level
is incomparable. Unlike Yerevan, the Kremlin is strong player
strongly affecting international processes. `That is, expectation of
threats of Armenian acts is not worthless’, political scientist
stresses. He also reminds that, Baku never took separatists of
Nagorni Garabagh as separate object. `These territories are occupied
by Armenia, so there is nothing astonishing in Yerevan’s new game’,
he added. In given situation the issue of Armenian citizenship has no
importance. `As even now considerable part of separatists have
Armenian passports and actively use them while departing abroad’,
political scientist informs. Accordingly to Ahmadoglu, steps of
Armenia should be taken as psychological game to which Baku will
attach no importance. On the contrary with the use of such facts,
Azerbaijan can draw attention of world community to annexationist
goals of Armenia.

S. Rzayev, N. Aliyev

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http://www.demaz.org/cgi-bin/e-cms/vis/vis.pl?s=0

BAKU: Armenian frontier guards fired on Turkey territory

Azeri Press Agency
Oct 14 2006

Armenian frontier guards fired on Turkey territory

[ 14 Oct. 2006 10:26 ]

Armenian frontier guards fired on Turkey’s positions two times on
October 11, APA Turkey bureau reports.

Official Ankara was alarmed of the situation, though no casualty was
recorded. Turkey Armed Forces Headquarters accused Armenia of the
incident. They sent information to Turkey Foreign Ministry for
necessary diplomatic measures.
There is no diplomatic relation between Turkey and Armenia. The
border of the two states is closed since 1993. /APA/

Historical truths belong to no political policy

Cyprus Mail
Oct 14 2006

Historical truths belong to no political policy

THE LOWER House of the French Parliament on Thursday adopted a bill
criminalising denial of the Armenian genocide in a move that has, not
surprisingly, infuriated Turkey.

One can be cynical about France’s motives: look at the influential
Armenian lobby and the looming elections, suggest that perhaps the
bill has as much to do with unease at possible Turkish membership of
the EU as it does with historical memory. One can also point (as
Turkey has done) to France’s (and others’) failure to come to terms
with an often shameful colonial past.

The move will certainly not have eased the growing tensions between
Europe and Turkey, as Ankara nears its progress report next month,
facing a possible `train crash’ over its refusal to meet commitments
over Cyprus. Many will rightly point out that confronting Turkey at
such a stage is more likely to create a nationalist backlash than
facilitate a political maturity that would allow acknowledgement of
past crimes.

But the fact remains that Turkey’s blinkered refusal to confront its
brutal past is illustration of how distant it is from the values on
which the EU has been built. It was only a few months ago that Nobel
prize winner Orhan Pamuk was put on trial for `insulting Turkishness’
in comments he made about the Armenian question.

Of course, not all of Europe is perfect in this regard. Far right
groups routinely revise history across Western Europe, while
questions of collaboration with Nazi Germany or with Communist
authorities in the former Eastern bloc remain extremely sensitive in
many countries.

But society is watchful to guard historical truth against political
revisionism. In much of Europe, holocaust denial is a crime, with
France now adding Armenian genocide denial to the same category. In
Turkey, genocide denial is state law, with those who speak out about
it facing jail. If Turkey ever hopes to join the EU, that has got to
change.

Rats, we’re all settlers

RAUF DENKTASH once famously said that the only true Cypriot was the
donkey, the others were Greeks and Turks.

The time has come to revise that view. After all, the donkey was
brought to the island from somewhere, by someone, a Mycenaean,
perhaps, or a Phoenician – the zoologists will know.

No, the real Cypriot it turns out is a mouse, Mus cypriacus, which,
we learned this week, established itself in the Cypriot environment
several thousand years before the arrival of man and has survived as
a unique species to this day.

So the indigenous population is not Greek or Turk… but rodent. The
rest of us are settlers, human visitors who have been colonising the
island in waves, from Neolithic times until today.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Armenians are Against Turkish Troops While Arabs Support

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Oct 14 2006

Armenians are Against Turkish Troops While Arabs Support
Saturday , 14 October 2006

About 5,000 Armenians protested the arrival of Turkish troops in
southern Lebanon to join the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).
The Lebanon Government invited Turkish troops to lebanon and all Arab
groups give support to Turkish troops in Lebanon.

Waving Armenian and ultra-nationalist Tashnak flags, the crowd
chanted anti-Turkish slogans, carried placards protesting Turkey’s
cooperation with Israel and accused and shouted accusations of the
purported Armenian genocide

Nobel Literature Prize causes mixed emotions in Turkey

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
October 13, 2006 Friday 3:04 PM EST

NEWS FEATURE: Nobel Literature Prize causes mixed emotions in Turkey

Ingo Bierschwale, dpa

DPA CULTURE, ENTERTAINMENT Turkey Nobel Literature NEWS FEATURE:
Nobel Literature Prize causes mixed emotions in Turkey Ingo
Bierschwale, dpa Istanbul
After Orhan Pamuk became the first Turkish author
to be awarded the Nobel Literature Prize, there were no masses taking

to the streets, no Turkish flags blowing in the wind, and no

cavalcades of honking fans.

Quite a few people in Turkey, however, joyfully jumped into the
air when they heard the Nobel committee’s decision Thursday from
Stockholm. Others followed suit, jumped out of their seats, and were
about to clap, before they realized what was going on and sat down
again in dismay. Others yet remained immobile, perplexed.

"We should applaud Orhan Pamuk like we have applauded our national
football team when they came third in the World Cup, like we
applauded the winner of the Eurovision Song Contest, Sertab Erener,"
the tabloid Sabah commented Friday.

"An author who writes in Turkish and who has emerged from our
midst has won the Nobel Literature Prize. Full stop. The End!," the
newspaper commented.

Many Turkish newspaper columnists, however, seemed to be suffering
Friday. "If only he had not said those words which have wounded our
hearts deeply," Ertugrul Ozkok, editor in chief of Hurriyet wrote.

Ozkok was referring to Pamuk’s remarks that during World War I
"one million Armenians were killed" in the Ottoman Empire, opening
old wounds in his Turkish homeland.

"We are angry at Pamuk because our Turkish soul weighs heavy in
us, but for the same reason we are also proud he won the highest
literary award," Ozkok wrote.

Like the editor-in-chief of Hurriyet, many asked themselves the
question why they weren’t able to "just be happy" for Pamuk.

"Has the West chosen Pamuk, not because he is a Turk, but because
he defends the West’s theses better than the West itself?" a
columnist in another newspaper asked, concluding that "at least he
wrote his novels in Turkish, even if his thoughts are not Turkish."

Others commented that Turkey was in dire need of more democratic
debate. But "criticising in the name of justice and democracy is one
thing, and selling out your own country in order to sell books and
gain worldwide fame is another," commented the left-leaning daily
Milliyet.

There was also some unreserved approval. "Turkey will in the
future be regarded as the country of Orhan Pamuk," the liberal-
leaning Radical said. "Once again, world attention will focus on
Turkey, Turkish literature and Orhan Pamuk’s city, Istanbul. Pamuk is

an honour for our language, our literature and our country."

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul also saw Pamuk’s award in a positive
light. The Turkish political debate over the author would soon be
forgotten. Much more significant was the worldwide resonance of the
Literature Nobel Prize awarded to a Turkish author, he deemed.
Oct 1306 1504 GMT

Canada: Armenia’s Minister here next week

The Gazette (Montreal)
October 13, 2006 Friday
Final Edition

Minister here next week

CanWest News Service

Armenia’s foreign minister will pay a politically charged visit to
Ottawa next week, six months after the Harper government formally
recognized the Armenian genocide and angered its NATO ally Turkey in
the process.

Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian will make the first official visit
by an Armenian politician since Canada acknowledged the genocide of
1915 in which 1.5 million people were killed.

The action angered Turkey, which warned it could have economic
implications. A leading Turkish newspaper has speculated Canadian
companies might be barred from bidding on contracts related to a
nuclear power plant.

Canada has about $760 million invested in Turkey.

Babikian said his visit was aimed at cementing future relations
between the two countries, including enhancing economic co-operation.

There are currently 75 joint ventures between the two countries, he
said.
From: Baghdasarian

Genocide denial – and its enemies

The Globe and Mail (Canada)
October 13, 2006 Friday

Genocide denial – and its enemies

MICHAEL MARRUS

Should it be a crime to deny the genocide of as many as a million
Armenians at the hands of the Turkish authorities in 1915, during the
dying days of the Ottoman Empire? This is what the overwhelming
majority of the French National Assembly, the lower house of the
French parliament, declared on Thursday, as it voted 106 to 19 in
favour of a Socialist-backed law that would punish what the French
call la négation du genocide arménien with a year in prison and a
hefty fine of $65,000.

The French law, which still needs the ratification of the Senate and
approval of the president of the Republic, might never see the light
of day – but only if cooler heads prevail than those that supported
the bill in parliament yesterday. According to its proponents, some
of whom published a manifesto in Wednesday’s Le Monde, the Armenian
genocide law was all about the campaign against genocide wherever it
exists. Genocide denial, wrote a group of anti-genocide lawyers, was
part of genocide itself, and as such called for both a political and
a juridical response. "Free expression," their argument goes, "does
not include the right to manipulate history nor to deny historical
evidence." Those who do, the legislators insisted, should be
punished. Proponents referred to weighty precedents: a 1990 law
against Holocaust denial, among other things, and an official
recognition of the Armenian genocide in 2001. "It is a question of
courage and a need for justice," claimed the signatories.

The context of this law, however, is somewhat wider than that. Not
entirely absent from the minds of the legislators was the electoral
impact of the French Armenian community of close to 500,000 – one of
the largest in Europe. These certainly seemed to have counted for
more than Armenians in Turkey, for whom this lawmaking was pronounced
an "imbecility," or for that matter of the French-Armenian deputy
Patrick Devedjian who tried in vain to present an amendment exempting
academic research from the harsh penalties of the law. Ever-present,
as well, were the concerns of those who have been doing their best to
torpedo not only improving Franco-Turkish relations, but also to
undermine the entry of Turkey into the European Union, a proposition
fervently championed by the French government and which may well not
survive the high-profile controversy the debate has provoked.

At least as important, however, are deep divisions among the French
about the role of government and the law in determining how history
should be understood and written. Less than a year ago, French
society was deeply split over another law that involved history. This
time it was the right, not the left, that was concerned with imposing
its notion of correct history, leading to the passage of a law that
required French high-schools to teach the "positive values" of French
colonialism and to "acknowledge and recognize in particular the
positive role of the French presence abroad, especially in North
Africa." Charging that legislators had no business defining
historical truth, the historical profession mobilized against this
law, which was eventually scuppered by French President Jacques
Chirac. But not before much political bloodletting, not to mention
severe diplomatic bruising from France’s former colonial subjects and
those who had fought against the French Empire.

There is a final element of context that lurks just beneath the
surface of these debates. Like all Europeans, the French feel
increasingly threatened by the blandishments of political Islamicists
who have challenged liberal notions of free expression, on issues
extending from the Danish cartoons to Pope Benedict XVI’s quotation
of a Byzantine Emperor’s disparaging remarks about the Prophet
Mohammed.

That is why editorial opinion in Paris yesterday, expressed by
newspaper editors who have, after all, much to lose from restrictions
on what people can or cannot say, seemed to be powerfully opposing
the moves of the parliamentarians. Free expression, we are seeing
once again, is indivisible: What is right for speech we might think
worth hearing, must also apply for speech that is detestable – as
many would think is the denial of the Armenian genocide.

"Committed to the defence of human rights," wrote the editorialist in
Le Figaro, "attentive to dialogue among peoples, France stands tall
when it is the messenger of peace and the values of civilization, but
it makes itself look ridiculous when it becomes a public prosecutor,
in the name of a supposed universal memory."

Michael R. Marrus is Chancellor Rose and Ray Wolfe Professor of
Holocaust Studies at the University of Toronto and the author of The
Nuremberg War Crimes Trial 1945-46: A Documentary History.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Canada: Official genocide recognition results in visit from FM

National Post (Canada)
October 13, 2006 Friday
Toronto Edition

Official Armenian genocide recognition results in visit from Foreign
Minister

CanWest News Service

Armenia’s Foreign Minister will pay a politically charged visit to
Ottawa next week, less than six months after the Harper government
formally recognized the Armenian genocide and angered its NATO ally
Turkey in the process. Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian will meet his
Canadian counterpart, Peter MacKay, on Wednesday and will also be
feted in a luncheon by some three dozen parliamentarians in what is
the first official visit by an Armenian politician since Prime
Minister Stephen Harper’s April statement acknowledged the Armenian
genocide of 1915 in which 1.5 million people were killed — a first
by the Canadian government and a decision that placed the country in
the company of 24 other countries.

Franco-Turkish relations sour over new law

National Post (Canada)
October 13, 2006 Friday
Toronto Edition

Franco-Turkish relations sour over new law

by David Rennie, The Daily Telegraph

BRUSSELS – The French parliament triggered a fresh crisis yesterday
in Turkey’s relations with Europe by approving a bill that would make
it an offence punishable by jail to deny Armenians suffered a
genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Turks.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry said the vote in the French Assemblee
Nationale had dealt "a heavy blow" to bilateral relations, while the
European Union said the bill could interfere with Turkish ambitions
to join the European bloc.

Turkey denies that massacres of Armenians between 1915 and 1923
amounted to genocide, saying large numbers of Turks and Armenians
died in a civil war.

Ali Babacan, Turkey’s Economics Minister, said it was too soon to
know whether the Turkish public would heed calls from nationalist
groups to boycott French goods.

"As the government, we are not encouraging that, but this is the
people’s decision," he said. "I cannot say [the vote] will not have
any consequences."

The Socialist-backed law was widely criticized in Turkey as another
attempt by European politicians to place obstacles in the path of
Ankara’s painful progress toward EU membership. Polls have shown that
60% of the French are opposed to Turkey joining the bloc.

France would impose a one-year prison term and a 45,000-euro fine on
anyone denying the Armenian genocide, the same penalty that is
imposed for denying the Nazi Holocaust.

The vote came ahead of French presidential and parliamentary
elections, in which the 400,000-strong Armenian community in France
will form a formidable voter bloc.

The bill does not have government support and it seems likely to fall
in the upper house, the Senate.

Both Jacques Chirac, the French President, and Segolene Royal, the
Socialist presidential front-runner, say Turkey must acknowledge the
genocide of the Armenians before joining the EU.

Nicolas Sarkozy, the conservative front-runner, is opposed to
Turkey’s EU entry under any condition.