ANKARA: Armenians Urge EU To Echo Swiss ‘Genocide’ Ruling

ARMENIANS URGE EU TO ECHO SWISS ‘GENOCIDE’ RULING

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 13 2007

Buoyed by a Swiss court’s decision condemning Doðu Perincek, chairman
of the Turkish Workers’ Party, for denying the Armenian "genocide,"
the Armenian lobby has called on the European Union to follow suit
and also criminalize genocide denial.

In a written statement yesterday the European Armenian Federation
called the Swiss verdict "an unprecedented legal victory." This is
the first time a court has given a verdict on the Armenian "genocide"
and is also the first time the alleged genocide has been recognized
by a court of criminal law.

EU president Germany wants to criminalize the denial of recognized
genocides, war crimes and crimes against humanity under a pan-EU law,
with prison sentences for offenders of between one and three years.

Though the Armenian lobby strongly supports the bid, several member
states like Britain, Italy and Denmark oppose such legislation on
the basis of freedom of expression.

"At the time when the EU is considering EU legislation aiming at
penalizing genocide denial, the Swiss case shows the path to follow,
i.e., the one in which denials of all clear instances of genocides
are fined — including those, such as the Armenian genocide, that
have never been previously sanctioned by international jurisdiction,"
read the statement.

A controversial figure in Turkey, Perincek immediately made it clear
he would appeal the Swiss court’s decision. He also signaled that
he could take the verdict to the European Court of Human Rights in
Strasbourg if the verdict is upheld by the Swiss Supreme Court.

Perincek was fined 3,000 Swiss francs and has to pay another 1,000
in damages to the Switzerland-Armenia Association.

The Swiss press has criticized the verdict, arguing it has created
the potential for future problems.

–Boundary_(ID_a2G4ea506RtBAfeVru0Q/A)- –

ANKARA: US Armenian Resolution ‘Indigestible’ To Turkey

US ARMENIAN RESOLUTION ‘INDIGESTIBLE’ TO TURKEY

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 13 2007

The Turkish prime minister’s foreign policy advisor has said insulting
the Turkish nation with a genocide that their ancestors did not commit
would be "indigestible," referring to the Armenian genocide resolution
pending in the US Congress.

Speaking to Today’s Zaman in Ýstanbul before leaving this weekend for
the US with a group of Turkish legislators to lobby in Washington
against the resolution, Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
deputy Egemen Baðýþ said at a time when Turkey and the US have
numerous joint projects going on, including Iraq’s reconstruction,
the resolution’s passage would be unacceptable for the Turkish public,
whose support for America’s foreign policy has been extremely low.

"Adding these genocide allegations on top of the current bad situation
would be like adding insult to injury. It would make things more
complicated. This is not a threat. It would put the government in an
awkward situation."

Baðýþ recalled that 80 percent of the logistical goods that the US
troops use in Iraq go through Turkey and that 60 percent of them are
made in Turkey.

"Turkey is the country with the second-highest casualties in Iraq
after the US. Although we don’t have any troops in Iraq, the Turkish
truck drivers, engineers, construction workers and contractors who
lost their lives in the efforts to rebuild Iraq, have reached about
150," he said, adding that the Turkish government has to take public
opinion into consideration and take measures if such a resolution
passed in the US Congress.

"We’re hoping that those lawmakers in the United States understand
the implications of the resolution, which they think is just a local
issue to please their local Armenian constituency and has no binding
effect on Turkey. But it’s more than that. It can really inflect
long-lasting damage to the relationship."

That’s why he and a second parliamentary delegation visited to
Washington on Sunday, Baðýþ said. He is joined by AK Party deputies
Reha Denemec and Vahit Erdem, and main opposition Republican People’s
Party (CHP) deputies Ersin Arýoðlu and Bihlun Tamaylýgil.

Also the chairman of Turkey-USA Interparliamentary Friendship Caucus,
Baðýþ said the delegation will participate in a meeting of the
Turkish-American Council today. The delegation will talk with members
of Jewish organizations and travel to Chicago, which has very strong
Turkish-American and African-American Muslim communities.

The Armenian genocide resolution was introduced on Jan. 30 and
currently has about 170 cosponsors.

Turkey rejects the "genocide" label and argues that 300,000 Armenians
and at least as many Turks died in civil strife, when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire during World War I.

US President George Bush will have to persuade the new
Democratic-controlled Congress, which does not need presidential
approval for such a resolution.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who will decide whether to offer the bill
for a full vote if, as expected, it is approved by the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, has expressed support.

–Boundary_(ID_D5ImvuOdcAbua8DSIGM3Ug)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

JP: The Region: Perception And Identity

THE REGION: PERCEPTION AND IDENTITY
By Barry Rubin

Jerusalem Post
March 13 2007

Let’s talk about two key issues concerning Turkey. First, in what
direction is that extremely important country going? Second, why are
US-Turkish relations about to face a very serious crisis?

In April, Turkey will choose a new president. In November, it will
pick a new parliament. If Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan wants to
be president, it is hard to see who is going to stop him. The Justice
and Development (AKP) party government is in a very strong position,
with the opposition parties still very much divided, unable to offer
a common program or a single inspiring or charismatic leader.

So this raises once again the central question of Turkish politics:
Is the AKP a conservative, traditionalist party which is moderate
in pushing more Islam onto Turkish society, or is it an Islamist
party in moderate clothing, plotting the total transformation of
Turkish society?

There are many people on both sides of this argument, an issue which
is of the deepest and greatest importance for the country’s future.

In some ways, perhaps, they are both right.

The AKP contains elements which understand that its success is
based on being a moderate party that wants to join Europe through
the European Union. It may be against the "Kemalist" elite which has
long dominated the country but stands for democracy and a largely –
if less completely – secular society.

At the same time, there are hard-line elements that want to take
Turkey, step by step, down a road that would undo the revolution of
Kemal Ataturk, turning Turkey into a somewhat more moderate version of
Iran. As the AKP conquers the key positions of Turkey – already the
parliament and prime ministership; soon the presidency? – it wants
to install teachers, judges, and laws which will make their social
domination comprehensive and irreversible.

The problem may be that the more power the AKP has, and the less
effective opposition it faces, the more tempting it will be to raise
its demands. If the AKP has to worry about being blocked or checked
by courts, criticized in the media, and defeated in elections, the
more cautious and hence moderate it might be.

At any rate, Turkey may be about to find out how an AKP whose control
is ever widening will act.

MEANWHILE, trouble is also brewing on the international scene. The
Democrats in the newly elected US Congress are promising to support
a resolution asserting that Turkey committed genocide during World
War I. If this passes, Turkey will be outraged – not just the
politicians, but the population in general – and will take strong
action. Anti-Americanism in Turkey, already at high levels, will
climb even more upward. The outcome will be a strengthening of more
extreme forces: the AKP (and more radical elements in that party) and
the nationalist plus semi-Islamist Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

In the past, such an outcome was prevented by the White House, under
both Democratic and Republican presidents, quietly telling Congress
that passing such a bill was bad for US interests. Today, Congress
has no interest in listening to what the current president might say
on that matter.

Proponents of Armenian genocide claim that there could have been
anywhere from 600,000 to as many as one million Armenian casualties
of Ottoman soldiers or irregular units. If Armenian communities
and nationalist movements had focused attention in recent decades
on those massacres, instead of genocide (which is a far more grave
accusation), they would have won universal support. Turkey would
probably be facing far more criticism, damage to its reputation,
and pressure to apologize and pay compensation than it does today.

I wouldn’t be surprised if, in these circumstances, such actions would
have become a condition for Turkey’s membership in the European Union.

BUT THE Armenian groups chose a different strategy, summed up by the
word "genocide." They insisted that the Ottoman Empire had committed
this most terrible of all crimes and had to be found guilty.

Responsibility for this passed to Turkey, the successor state. It
is also worth pointing out, however, that the present-day republic
of Turkey arose by overthrowing the Ottoman Empire and those who had
governed it in World War I.

This strategy greatly raised the stakes while doing two things that
led to its relative failure.

First, the Armenians now had to prove that the Ottoman Empire had
consciously, deliberately and systematically decided to wipe out the
Armenians. And this they could not do because evidence was lacking. A
very high standard of proof is required for genocide. As a result,
an easy Armenian victory was turned into a far tougher struggle.

Second, the Turks can point to extenuating circumstances: it was
wartime, the first act of aggression was from the Armenians taking
arms against their own government; Armenian units were being raised to
fight against the Ottomans as part of the Russian army; Armenians also
massacred Turks; and indeed, close to 2.5 million Anatolian Muslims
died due to starvation, disease and fighting during this period of
Ottoman history.

EVEN IF one does not accept the plea of "self-defense," most of
the world is thus ready to acquit the Ottomans of first-degree
murder, while they might easily have convicted them on a charge
of manslaughter, a serious but lesser crime. The United States and
the West need Turkey today to deal with Iran, Iraq, Central Asia,
and lots of other issues.

It would be wrong to look the other way if Turkey was guilty of
genocide. But why should critical relations be sacrificed on the
basis of a wrongful accusation?

At the same time, of course, Turkey’s number-one foreign policy
goal – full membership in the EU – is in jeopardy. The Europeans
are reluctant to admit Turkey for a long list of reasons including
religious, cultural, economic and political. Things have just reached
the point where it is starting to become clear that Turkey cannot
please enough Europeans to get in for a very long time.

So there are two issues right now for Turkey: One is how it sees
itself; the other is how others see it.

Rwanda’s Genocide: First The Deed, Then The Denial

RWANDA’S GENOCIDE: FIRST THE DEED, THEN THE DENIAL
By Gerald Caplan

The Globe and Mail (Canada)
March 13, 2007 Tuesday

The genocidal pattern never varies, though the deniers’ motives are
mixed. They run a gamut from the obvious – to escape punishment –
to the geopolitical, to the incomprehensible. But deniers there
always are. The Turkish nation, led by its government and military,
overwhelmingly denies the consensus of objective scholarship – that
the Turkish government in 1915 set out to annihilate the country’s
Armenian population and murdered more than a million of them.

Neo-Nazis, anti-Semites, some anti-Zionists and a motley crew of the
demented to this day deny the reality of Hitler’s extermination of
six million Jews and hundreds of thousands of Europe’s Roma people,
very possibly the best-documented event in modern history. Many
Serbians deny the responsibility of other Serbians for what two
international tribunals have ruled was the genocide of Bosnian Muslim
males in Srebrenica.

Then there is Rwanda. It is a statement of fact that every scholar who
has studied the 1994 conflict in Rwanda has concluded that a small,
sophisticated group of power-hungry Hutu extremists conspired to
exterminate the country’s entire Tutsi population, and very nearly
succeeded. The number of books and detailed studies increases at a
welcome pace, and while there is disagreement about many aspects of
Rwanda’s 100 days (as there is too with all its forerunners), the
central truth is not in doubt. Denying the genocide of the Tutsi in
Rwanda is morally equivalent to denying the Holocaust.

Rwanda’s deniers, exhibiting the usual mixture of self-serving and
perverse motives, fall generally into two categories. First are Hutu
Power sympathizers and outsiders with close ties to the long-serving
Rwandan regime whose extremist core planned the genocide. Second
are newcomers to Rwanda whose first introduction was as attorneys
(or their associates) for those accused of genocide being tried by
the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). All accused
everywhere should have the right to a rigorous defence. But some among
this group made the giant leap from arguing that their clients were
innocent of the crime of genocide to arguing that no genocide had
been carried out at all.

Bizarrely enough, a number of these deniers are left-wing Canadian
lawyers and investigators, whose motives are as dim as their case
is hollow. But Canada’s most prominent non-Hutu denier for many
years has been Robin Philpot, born in Ontario but long a resident
of Montreal. Although Mr. Philpot lived in west Africa more than
30 years ago, his only apparent link to Rwanda is his brother John,
who was a defence lawyer at the ICTR for a man convicted of genocide.

Robin Philpot believes there was no genocide in 1994. In many articles
over the years – some published in English in the American left-wing
journal Counterpunch, others in French in Quebec newspapers – and in
a book translated into English as Rwanda 94: Colonialism Dies Hard –
Mr. Philpot has insisted that what happened in Rwanda was part of a
diabolical American plot to end French influence in the Great Lakes
area of Africa. Paul Kagame’s Rwandan Patriotic Front and General
Romeo Dallaire, according to Mr. Philpot, were among the United States’
chosen instruments in this cynical geopolitical game.

Maybe this explains why certain self-styled leftists embrace Mr.
Philpot’s fantasies.

Mr. Philpot says many people were killed in 1994 by both sides
making those who carried out the genocide and their enemies morally
equivalent. There was no one-sided conspiracy by armed Hutu forces
and militias against a million defenceless Tutsi, he says. Since the
evidence completely contradicts these assertions, Mr. Philpot churns
out a strange, incoherent series of assertions, rumours and speculation
tied together solely by his unwavering determination to deny the truth.

Robin Philpot is now a candidate for the Parti Quebecois in the
provincial election. His Rwandan stance has become a campaign issue.

Unlike him, both his leader Andre Boisclair and Premier Jean Charest
accept history’s verdict on the genocide. That left Mr. Philpot with
limited options. He chose consistency. Having denied the genocide
for so many years, he has now denied his denial. He insists that "at
no time did I ever deny the existence of a genocide in Rwanda." Mr.
Boisclair has said he is "very happy with the explanations" Mr.
Philpot gave him and won’t demand his resignation as a PQ candidate.
Mr. Boisclair is too happy too easily.

Genocide experts understand denial as a second cruel ordeal for
survivors and families of victims – first the event, then the pain
and insult of denial. All of us need to demonstrate our sensitivity
to this searing issue. At the very least, surely Mr. Philpot has lost
his right to be embraced by a self-respecting political party.

Gerald Caplan is author of Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide.

ANKARA: Turkish Parliamentarians In Washington To Lobby Against Arme

TURKISH PARLIAMENTARIANS IN WASHINGTON TO LOBBY AGAINST ARMENIAN BILL

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
March 12 2007

WASHINGTON D.C. (A.A) -12.03.2007 -Turkish parliamentarians arrived in
Washington D.C. today to lobby against the resolution on the so-called
Armenian genocide, presented to the US House of Representatives.

Turkish MPs are to meet executives of the US Department of State and
members of Jewish organizations, and participate in a meeting to be
organized by Turkish American Council.

This is the second parliamentary delegation visiting the United
States. The first one lobbied against the resolution in the previous
weeks.

Another parliamentary delegation is expected to arrive in Washington
D.C. at the end of this month.

CSTO Gen-Sec To Arrive In Yerevan For 3-Day Visit

CSTO GEN-SEC TO ARRIVE IN YEREVAN FOR 3-DAY VISIT

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
March 13, 2007 Tuesday 03:16 AM EST

General Secretary of the Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO) Nikolai Bordyuzha is arriving in Yerevan for a three-day visit
on Tuesday evening.

As Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Armen Kirakosyan told Itar-Tass,
the general secretary will come "to continue a dialogue with
the republic’s leadership and hold meetings with the public." In
particular, Bordyuzha will address students and teachers of the
Yerevan State University and speak at the Military Institute of the
Defence Ministry of the republic.

"Armenia is and continues to be a CSTO member," confirmed
Kirakosyan. According to him, "cooperation of the republic with NATO
cannot be considered as rivalry with cooperation in CSTO." "In one
case, we are a member of CSTO, and in another – – we cooperate with
NATO," the diplomat explained.

"With Russia we have large-scale relations in the sphere of security,
are a member of CSTO and simultaneously develop cooperation with NATO
within the plan of individual partnership," Armenian Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanyan stressed. "Cooperation of many years has shown that
there is no contradiction in these issues," the minister believes. By
means of this cooperation will be able to make a contribution to the
consolidation of security in the region," Oskanyan thinks.

"Armenia considers CSTO as one of the most important factors of
ensuring its security," Secretary of the National Security Council,
Defence Minister of the republic Serzh Sarkisyan said. According to
him, "Armenian-Russian cooperation within the framework of CSTO is
one of the most important guarantees of ensuring military security
of Armenia."

The minister recalled that within the CSTO framework,
a Russian-Armenian group of troops, which includes units of the
Russian military base in Armenia and the Armenian Armed Forces, was
formed and successfully operating in the Caucasian direction within
the framework of CSTO.

ANKARA: Turkey’s Ruling Party Warns Adoption Of Armenian Bill Might

TURKEY’S RULING PARTY WARNS ADOPTION OF ARMENIAN BILL MIGHT HARM TURKEY-US TIES

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
March 13 2007

WASHINGTON D.C. (A.A) -13.03.2007 -"If the draft law (on the so-called
Armenian genocide) submitted to the US Congress is adopted, Turkish-US
relations will be harmed by the Congress itself," Egemen Bagis,
Justice & Development Party (AKP) MP, said on Tuesday.

Bagis is a member of the Turkish parliamentary delegation actually
in Washington D.C. to lobby against the draft resolution.

In an exclusive interview with the A.A correspondent, Bagis said,
"we are endeavouring to prevent the US Congress to make a wrong
historic decision. We will inform and warn them within this scope."

Expressing uneasiness over the situation since he is also the Chairman
of Turkish-US Inter-Parliamentary Friendship Group, Bagis said,
"Congress members are under pressure by their own voters. The voters
exercise pressure for their own ethnic interests."

"This resolution will also kill the chance of Armenia to open up
to the West. Turkey is the gate for Armenia to open to the Western
world. This is a passage of peace, civilization, democracy and economic
development. However, Armenia insistently tries to close this gate
through such kind of campaigns," Bagis indicated.

"Armenia should abandon remaining stuck between the controversial
pages of the history and should catch up with the 21st century. In that
case we will have many things to discuss with Armenia," Bagis noted.

On the other hand Turkish parliamentary delegation members met
executives of AIPAC, a Jewish institution, on Monday evening.

The delegation is expected to have talks in US State Department and
meet executives of some Jewish organizations today.

The delegation will also have talks in the Congress on Wednesday
and Thursday.

Le Printemps Des =?unknown?q?Po=E8tes?= Armeniens

LE PRINTEMPS DES POèTES ARMENIENS

La Nouvelle Republique du Centre Ouest
Edition INDRE ET LOIRE
13 mars 2007 mardi

Dans le cycle de l’annee de l’Armenie en France, et faisant suite
a l’exposition des photos " Reves fragiles " d’Antoine Agoudjian,
en janvier dernier, une rencontre viendra completer l’exposition
actuelle des planches de la BD de Farid Boudjellal " Meme d’Armenie
", vendredi 16 mars a la bibliothèque municipale.

Baptisee " Printemps des poètes armeniens ", il s’agit d’une lecture
de poesie armenienne, en francais et en armenien.

Et ce sont des jeunes de l’Union des Armeniens du Centre qui auront
la noble tâche, une heure durant, de faire passer le souffle poetique
de leur pays.

La rencontre et lecture auront lieu a 18 h 30, dans la bibliothèque,
dont l’entree sera libre.

–Boundary_(ID_GBhae8gD5xJN5nej39M67A)–

Fin Tragique Pour Une Fille D’Armenie

FIN TRAGIQUE POUR UNE FILLE D’ARMENIE

Le Temps, Suisse
13 mars 2007

HOMICIDE. Etudiante a Genève, elle se prostituait en secret jusqu’a
ce qu’un client la tue.

Elle se faisait appeler Olga. Partie de son Armenie natale pour faire
des etudes universitaires en Suisse, la jeune femme avait une vie
cachee dans la prostitution dont elle n’avait rien dit a ses amies.

Elle voulait reunir un maximum d’argent avant de rentrer au pays. Un
projet qui ne se concretisera jamais.

Son corps, plonge dans une baignoire remplie d’eau et en etat de
decomposition avance, a ete retrouve chez elle un soir de juillet
2005, mains et pieds attaches dans le dos, un sac en plastique sur la
tete. La scène est si horrible que la presidente de la Cour d’assises
de Genève, qui juge depuis lundi l’auteur presume de l’homicide,
a prefere ne pas soumettre les photos aux jures.

Pour le père d’Olga, medecin a Erevan, les enfants, il lui en reste
deux, sont source de fierte. Il parle de leurs etudes en droit ou en
sciences economiques et de son education sevère. Jamais il n’aurait
compris que sa fille aînee travaille dans un salon de massage. Sa
mort et les circonstances qui l’ont entouree ont constitue un "choc
inimaginable". "Je ne souhaite a personne d’entendre une nouvelle
pareille", a-t-il explique au procès. Au pays, la famille a prefere ne
pas ebruiter l’affaire. Olga, morte a 27 ans, est enterree au cimetière
de Carouge. "J’ai pris un peu de terre pour la faire benir chez nous",
ajoute le père.

Mise en scène

L’accuse, un mecanicien sur autos de 31 ans – appelons-le Felipe –
arrete après avoir imprudemment utilise le portable vole cette nuit-la
a sa victime, a presente ses regrets lors de l’audience. "Je n’ai
jamais voulu que cela arrive, c’etait un accident".

Telle est la thèse qu’il soutient depuis son arrestation. Le prevenu
a explique qu’il avait rendez-vous ce soir-la au domicile d’Olga pour
y passer une nuit tarifee. Lors de leurs ebats, celle-ci lui aurait
demande de l’etrangler. Il dit avoir presse ses mains autour du cou
de la jeune femme en fermant les yeux. Lorsqu’il les a rouverts,
elle etait morte. Selon ses collègues du salon de massage, Olga ne
faisait pourtant pas dans les specialites et n’avait aucune attirance
pour l’asphyxiophilie.

Après ce que son defenseur, Me Christian Luscher, soutient etre
un homicide par negligence, Felipe a mis le corps ligote dans la
baignoire, ferme la salle de bains a cle, ouvert la fenetre du
studio, efface toutes ses empreintes, pris les telephones et les
cartes bancaires de sa victime avec lesquelles il a effectue des
retraits. Pour effacer les traces, retarder la decouverte du cadavre,
faire croire a un crime crapuleux. Bref, brouiller les pistes.

Quelques heures après les faits, c’est un homme jovial, selon tous
ceux qui ont croise sa route, qui est alle prendre un aperitif avec
son père avant de poursuivre sur sa lancee a la Lake Parade et finir
au casino où il a la reputation d’etre un joueur compulsif.

Il faudra neuf jours pour qu’une amie d’Olga s’inquiète de sa
disparition au point d’alerter la police. L’eau et la chaleur ont
deploye leurs effets. L’alteration cadaverique est telle – le corps
a gonfle et change de couleur – que le medecin legiste ne peut que se
hasarder a des hypothèses. Entre la mort par submersion et celle par
asphyxie, le docteur Romano La Harpe opte plutôt pour la seconde. Il
n’y a pas trace de strangulation mais de petites taches qui font
penser a un etouffement dont l’origine reste floue. Congele, decongele,
le corps est a nouveau autopsie a Lausanne sans plus de certitude.

Retard mental

Accuse d’assassinat par le procureur Claudio Mascotto, Felipe a
presente un comportement anormal dès son enfance. Mal integre dans
la societe, il a toujours vecu chez ses parents et n’a jamais eu de
compagne. A l’expert psychiatre, le docteur Gerard Niveau, il a dit
qu’il etait fou amoureux d’Olga. Elle ne voyait au contraire en lui
qu’un client parfois trop insistant. Ce soir-la, elle avait fait une
entorse a la règle en le laissant venir a son domicile. Les 2500
francs promis allaient l’aider, se rejouissait-elle, a acheter un
cabriolet. La route a pris fin beaucoup plus tôt que prevu pour la
fille venue de l’Est. Quant a l’avenir de Felipe, il sera tranche
aujourd’hui.

–Boundary_(ID_RQhe/MEN0py2G XzkKH8icA)–

Affaire Dogu Perincek: Son Avocat Fait Recours

AFFAIRE DOGU PERINCEK: SON AVOCAT FAIT RECOURS

Le Matin
Edition Semaine
13 mars 2007 mardi

L’avocat de Dogu Perincek, Me Laurent Moreillon, a fait recours
hier contre la condamnation de son client. Le nationaliste turc a
ete reconnu coupable, vendredi dernier a Lausanne, de discrimination
raciale pour negation du genocide armenien. "La declaration de recours
part aujourd’hui (ndlr: hier) et le memoire explicatif suivra une
fois que nous aurons pris connaissance des considerants du jugement",
a explique une collaboratrice de l’avocat. A l’issue du procès,
Dogu Perincek avait annonce qu’il etait pret a aller jusqu’a la Cour
europeenne des droits de l’homme a Strasbourg s’il n’obtenait pas
gain de cause devant le Tribunal cantonal vaudois ou le Tribunal
federal. La condamnation du chef du Parti des travailleurs turcs a
souleve un tolle dans son pays et suscite les critiques de l’ambassade
de Turquie en Suisse.

–Boundary_(ID_oYmgvgagcopwOD60YygnZQ)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress