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Turkish Party Leader Gives Great Christmas Gift to Armenian Cause

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  • Turkish Party Leader Gives Great Christmas Gift to Armenian Cause

    Turkish Party Leader Gives Great Christmas Gift to Armenian Cause

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    In a historic decision on December 12, Switzerland's Federal Tribunal
    confirmed a lower court's conviction of Turkish Party leader Dogu
    Perincek for denying the Armenian Genocide.
    The ruling by the Federal Tribunal (Supreme Court) has far-reaching
    consequences much beyond the borders of Switzerland. For years,
    Turkish officials have claimed that the Armenian mass killings of
    1915-23 could not be viewed as a case of genocide since there was no
    court verdict to that effect. Turkish denialists persistently ignored
    the ample documentation provided by historians, genocide scholars,
    resolutions adopted by the European Parliament and legislatures of
    more than 20 countries, a UN human rights panel, and verdicts of
    Turkish Military Tribunals in 1919.
    Two years ago, Perincek, the leader of Turkey's Workers' Party, went
    to Switzerland and challenged the Swiss authorities to try him for
    violating local laws on denying genocide. He claimed that he could not
    have violated the country's laws against genocide denial since there
    never was an Armenian genocide. He hoped that by obtaining a not
    guilty verdict, he would become a Turkish national hero for having
    single-handedly ended Armenian accusations of genocide against Turkey.
    Neither Perincek nor the Turkish government that backed his risky
    adventure seemed to realize that while winning the court case would
    promote their denialist agenda, a guilty verdict would deal a
    devastating blow to their continued refusal to acknowledge the
    Armenian Genocide.
    During his visit to Switzerland in July 2005, Perincek called the
    Armenian Genocide an "international lie" and was promptly detained and
    interrogated by Swiss Police. He was released, pending a fuller
    investigation of his statements. Charges were subsequently filed
    against him. For his mandated court appearance, Perincek returned to
    Switzerland in March 2007 with a planeload of fanatical supporters who
    described themselves as members of the "Talat Pasha Committee," in
    honor of the mastermind of the Armenian Genocide. He also brought with
    him over 200 pounds of "documents" that supposedly backed his
    denialist claims.
    Testifying on Perincek's behalf were four notorious Turkophiles:
    Prof. Justin McCarthy from the United States; Norman Stone, a British
    denialist who teaches in Turkey; Jean-Michel Thibaux, a former
    Frenchman who had recently moved to Turkey, acquired Turkish
    citizenship and changed his name to "Atakan Turk"; and Prof. Paul
    Leidinger from Germany. Testifying against Perincek were genocide
    specialists Yves Ternon and Raymond Kevorkian from France and Tessa
    Hofmann from Germany.
    Despite attempts by the Turkish government to pressure the Swiss
    authorities to drop the charges, the Lausanne Court of First Instance
    found Perincek guilty and fined $7,350 in lieu of a 90-day suspended
    jail term, ordered him to pay a $2,450 fine and $4,750 for court
    costs. In addition, the court warned Perincek that should he deny the
    Armenian Genocide again within the next 24 months, he could face
    imprisonment. Perincek thus became the first person to be convicted
    under Switzerland's anti-racism law for denying the Armenian
    Genocide. Article 261bis of the Swiss penal code -- which outlaws the
    denial, minimization or justification of genocide -- was heretofore
    applied only to those who had denied the xxxish Holocaust. Perincek
    was also ordered by the court to pay $9,000 for legal expenses and
    "moral compensation" to the Switzerland-Armenia Association which had
    initiated the lawsuit against Perincek. Since Ankara had sided with
    Perincek and provided legal and material support for
    his trial, the guilty verdict also implicated the Turkish government
    which declared the trial to be "inappropriate, groundless and
    controversial in every sense."
    Fortunately for Armenians, Perincek stubbornly persisted in his
    efforts to challenge the Swiss legal system, thus causing even more
    damage to Turkey's denialist campaign. In June 2007, Perincek took his
    case to the Swiss Court of Appeal which confirmed his guilty
    verdict. Thus, within the short span of three months, Perincek helped
    confirm the fact of the Armenian Genocide through the verdicts of two
    Swiss courts. Not satisfied, Perincek then appealed his case to the
    Swiss Federal Tribunal which confirmed the verdicts of the lower
    courts on December 12, 2007.
    The Federal Tribunal ruled that there was an overall consensus that
    the Armenian Genocide had taken place and that Perincek had not been
    able to prove the contrary, thus making light of his 200 pounds of
    anti-Armenian "documents" and dismissing the testimonies of the four
    so-called scholars who testified on his behalf. The Court also said
    that Perincek was "motivated by racism and nationalism," and not a
    desire for "historical debate." In countering Perincek's argument that
    not all countries have recognized the Armenian Genocide, the Court
    stated that even a United Nations resolution condemning the denial of
    the xxxish Holocaust received only 103 votes out of the 192 member
    states in January 2007. The Court further declared that the refusal of
    some countries to acknowledge such genocidal acts for political
    reasons does not cast doubt on their validity.
    It is noteworthy that the Swiss Federal Tribunal stated in its verdict
    that "the denial of the Genocide constitutes a threat to the identity
    of the Armenian people." The Court also asserted that
    Perincek¢s conviction "contributes to the protection of the
    human dignity of the members of the Armenian community who define
    themselves by the memory of the Genocide of 1915."
    Thanks to Perincek and his shortsighted backers in Ankara, Armenians
    have won a very significant victory. This is the first time that the
    highest court of any country passes judgment on the Armenian Genocide,
    thus serving as a precedent for all future court cases on this issue.
    Despite his overzealous efforts to counter the recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide, Perincek and Turkish officials who support him have
    only managed to undermine Turkey¢s massive denialist
    campaign. Perincek announced last week that he will be appealing his
    conviction to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. Should
    he go through with that appeal, he would be making an even more
    substantial contribution to the Armenian Cause, by furthering the
    legal recognition of the Armenian Genocide through Europe's highest
    court of law.


  • #2
    Re: Turkish Party Leader Gives Great Christmas Gift to Armenian Cause

    Doğu Perçinek is stupid socialist and retarded!!!!!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Turkish Party Leader Gives Great Christmas Gift to Armenian Cause

      Here is a nice picture of Perincek with Ocalan

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Turkish Party Leader Gives Great Christmas Gift to Armenian Cause

        Originally posted by Lernakan View Post
        Here is a nice picture of Perincek with Ocalan

        yea!! Why do I slang him!!

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Turkish Party Leader Gives Great Christmas Gift to Armenian Cause

          Originally posted by Kanki View Post
          yea!! Why do I slang him!!
          yeah man slang...that's right

          Comment

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