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

Armenia memorial stolen in France

Armenia memorial stolen in France
A bronze statue commemorating the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
Armenians in Turkey has been stolen from the Paris suburb of Chaville.
Police say the monument may have been taken to be sold as scrap metal.
But some are connecting the theft to last Thursday’s vote by the French
parliament making it a crime to deny that Armenians suffered "genocide".
Armenia says Ottoman Turks killed 1.5 million people systematically in 1915-
a claim strongly denied by Turkey.

The 300kg (660lb) sculpture was cut off its pedestal in the suburb of
Chaville 13km (8 miles) from Paris some time between Friday night and Saturday
morning, local officials said.
But the site in front of Chaville’s train station had otherwise not been
vandalised and there was no graffiti.

One motive may have been money with the monument, which was erected in 2002,
being taken to be melted down and sold on as scrap.
But Stephane Topalian, a member of the Armenian church council in Chaville,
said that was unlikely.
"Police say it might have been stolen for the metal, but it seems too much of
a coincidence that this should have happened just after parliament voted the
Armenia bill," he told Reuters news agency.
Turkey condemned the French vote which would make it a crime to deny that
Armenians suffered "genocide" at the hands of the Ottoman Turks.
Ankara, which said the move was a serious blow to relations, threatened
sanctions. The vote was also criticised by the EU.
The bill still needs to be approved by the Senate and the president to become
law.
France has a large Armenian community, with up to 500,000 people of Armenian
descent.
There are more than 30 memorials to Armenian victims across France.

Story from BBC NEWS:
/6051242.stm

Published: 2006/10/14 15:08:42 GMT

© BBC MMVI

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe

Interdiction de nier le drame de 1915 – La France adopte une …

Le Devoir

Interdiction de nier le drame de 1915 – La France adopte une
sur le génocide arménien
Les parlementaires suscitent la colère de la Turquie et les critiques
de l’Union européenne
AFP
Édition du vendredi 13 octobre 2006
Mots clés : Québec (province), Violence, loi, génocide arménien,
ue
Malgré l’hostilité du gouvernement, les députés français ont
adopté hier une proposition de loi socialiste qui sanctionne la
négation du génocide arménien, provoquant la colère de la
Turquie et les critiques des institutions de l’Union européenne.

Un membre de l’opposition turque est allé hier mettre une couronne
mortuaire sur le consulat de France à Istanbul
Agence Reuters
Grace à la non-participation au vote de la majeure partie des
députés UMP, le texte a été validé par 106 voix contre 19.
Compte tenu du calendrier parlementaire, il semble toutefois peu
probable qu’il soit discuté au Sénat avant la fin de l’actuelle
législature, en février 2007.

Ce vote porte un «coup dur» aux relations franco-turques, a
déclaré le ministère turc des Affaires étrangères dans un
communiqué, selon lequel la France «perd malheureusement sa position
privilégiée au sein du peuple turc». Avant le vote, la Turquie
avait brandi la menace de représailles économiques.

Il a aussi été critiqué par la Commission européenne, selon
laquelle ce texte peut «empêcher le dialogue pour la
réconciliation» entre la Turquie et l’Arménie. Bruxelles y voit en
outre un obstacle au dialogue avec la Turquie au moment où celle-ci
frappe à la porte de l’Europe.

Le gouvernement français s’est aussi distancé du texte, qu’il ne
soutenait pas. Le premier ministre Dominique de Villepin a estimé que
ce n’était «pas une bonne chose que de légiférer sur les
questions d’histoire et de mémoire». Et le ministère des Affaires
étrangères a rappelé que la France restait «très attachée au
dialogue avec la Turquie».

Mais les députés font passé outre les mises en garde sur une crise
avec la Turquie pour adopter ce texte prévoyant que toute personne
niant la réalité du génocide arménien de 1915 sera punie d’un an
de prison et d’une forte amende.
Déposée par l’opposition socialiste, la proposition a été
adoptée à une large majorité : 106 voix pour et 19 contre.
Quarante-neuf députés du parti UMP au pouvoir (droite) ont voté
oui, ainsi que 40 élus du Parti socialiste (PS). La majorité des 577
députés étaient cependant absents au moment du vote, salué par
des applaudissements. Ce texte complète une loi de 2001 qui avait
déjà marqué la reconnaissance du génocide arménien.

Le vote d’hier ne signifie cependant pas que la loi va forcément
entrer en vigueur : le texte doit encore être adopté par le
Sénat (Chambre haute du Parlement) avant une deuxième lecture. Les
groupes politiques pourraient alors décider de ne pas l’inscrire à
l’ordre du jour afin de ne pas envenimer les relations avec Ankara.
À l’Assemblée, le texte a divisé les partis au-delà du clivage
gauche-droite.

«J’espère que la France, patrie de la liberté où chacun peut
librement exprimer ses opinions, ne deviendra pas un pays où des gens
sont emprisonnés pour avoir exprimé leurs opinions et publié des
documents», avait déclaré mercredi le ministre turc des Affaires
étrangères, Abdullah Gül.

Lors des débats, le député du parti au pouvoir (UMP) Patrick
Devedjian, d’origine arménienne, a accusé la Turquie «d’exporter
le négationnisme dans notre pays» en organisant des manifestations
en France.

Le débat a eu lieu en présence de sept députés turcs invités
par le président de l’Assemblée nationale Jean-Louis Debré —
opposé à l’adoption du texte — et installés dans la tribune
présidentielle. Ils se sont éclipsés en silence après le vote.

Hasard du calendrier, ce vote est survenu le jour de l’attribution du
prix Nobel de littérature au romancier Orhan Pamuk, critiqué en
Turquie pour avoir pris la défense de la cause arménienne.

Les Arméniens estiment que jusqu’à 1,5 million des leurs ont péri
dans un génocide perpétré par les Turcs entre 1915 et 1917, ce
qu’Ankara récuse.

Agence France-Presse
et Reuters

Aram I Catholicos Greets Jacques Chirac’s Statement Concerning Armen

ARAM I CATHOLICOS GREETS JACQUES CHIRAC’S STATEMENT CONCERNING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan News Agency
Oct 12 2006

ANTELIAS, OCTOBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. All efforts to
deny the Armenian Genocide may open a door for a new genocide. So, the
international community must seriously approach the Armenian Genocide
which remains unpunished till now. It is said in the letter of Aram
I Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia addressed to President
of France Jacques Chirac. The letter was submitted to Noyan Tapan by
the Press Services of the Cilicia Catholicosate.

Greeting the last statement made by the President of France in Armenia
on the occasion of the Armenian Genocide, by which the French people’s
clear and decisive attitude towards the mentioned tragedy of the
history was again expressed, Aram I Catholicos mentions that France,
with its devotion towards human values and principles of the law
and justice, must serve as an example for all those countries which
continue denying the Armenian Genocide. "I believe in the dialogue
of cultures, religions and peoples. I often touched upon this theme
in my addresses, public speeches and in my books. But recognition
and proclaiming of the truth must only lead the dialogue and peace,"
is said in the letter.

In words of the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, Europe is
not only a geographic territory and not a simple political unit.

"Europe is a community of cultural and moral values based considerably
on the human rights. So, I ask a question: Which is the place of
Turkey in the European family?"

Expressing gratitude to the President of France, Aram I Catholicos
mentions that J.Chirac’s position in favour of the Armenian Genocide
recognition is worthy of France and principles kept and protected by
it as well as the "rare role" played by France for the sake of the
human rights protection in the world.

ANKARA: Deveciyan’s Hope Is The Madame

DEVECIYAN’S HOPE IS THE MADAME

Sabah, Turkey
Oct 12 2006

The most heated defender of the Armenian genocide denial, Deveciyan
said: "There is no risk of this bill not passing as the meeting will
be governed by the cabinet’s socialist vice-president, Mignon."

Patrick Deveciyan pointed out that the voting today on the Armenian
genocide denial bill, should go well, by saying: "The meeting is
managed by the cabinet’s socialist vice-president. There is no risk
of it not passing."

Strong supporter of the Armenian bill says: "There is no risk this
time."

A strong supporter of the legal draft considering the denial of
the Armenian genocide to be a crime, Deveciyan, said that there
is no risk this time for the bill which was prevented last time
around. The meeting will be managed by the socialist vice president
of the cabinet, Mignon.

If the prospective president candidate, Sarkozy, the Minister of
Internal Affairs, supports the denial bill, despite opposition in
his party; and if he offers conditions to the Prime Minister Erdoðan
to withdraw the bill, the most significant reason for this would
be Patrick Deveciyan. The famous advocate of Asala action, Patrick
Deveciyan, whose grandfather was a high level bureaucrat in the Ottoman
Empire is the most influential and active name connected to the bill.

–Boundary_(ID_ia56+/cd0rFn2DAOxqkQYA)–

Isn’t The Draft The Official Position Of France?

ISN’T THE DRAFT THE OFFICIAL POSITION OF FRANCE?

A1+
[07:35 pm] 11 October, 2006

France benefit from the adoption of the law criminalizing the negation
of the Armenian Genocide, announced French Ambassador to Azerbaijan
Bernard du Chaffaut. He underlined that the draft has been brought
to the Parliament by the oppositional Socialist Party.

Bernard du Chaffaut also mentioned that even if the draft is adopted
in the National Assembly, it will not mean that it will come into
force at once. For that the Senate must confirm it; and even if the
Senate does so, it still will not be the official position of France
to the issue, agency "Trend" informs.

The French diplomat mentioned that the adoption of the draft cannot
have negative influence on the French-Turkish relations and the
relations of France with other Moslem countries. The Ambassador claimed
that the attitude of France will not affect the membership of Turkey
in the EU and that the President of France is for Turkey’s membership.

"Alternative" Following The Example Of "Karabakh Committee"

"ALTERNATIVE" FOLLOWING THE EXAMPLE OF "KARABAKH COMMITTEE"

A1+
[04:43 pm] 10 October, 2006

Today, "Alternative" social-political initiative announced the launch
of its political activity. The main characteristics of this initiative
is that "it involves not political forces or parties but individuals."

With this feature the initiative differs from other formats existing
prior to it which ended in failure.

Part of these "individuals" are former high-rank officials, among
them Babken Ararktsyan, Vahagn Khachatryan, Erjanik Abgaryan, Samvel
Abrahamyan, Samvel Grigoryan, Vahram Dumanyan, Aghasy Enoqyan, Sedrak
Hovhannesyan, Samson Ghazaryan, David Matevosyan, Petros Makeyan,
Daivid Meliqyan, Ghukas Mehrabyan, Vardges Lazarian, Ashot Sargsyan,
Karen Sargsyan, Tigran Sedrakyan and Nikol Pashinyan (editor-in-chief
of "Armenian Time" daily). With the exception of Nikol Pashinyan,
all above-mentioned people were formerly members of Armenian National
Movement. At present some of them are members of "Armat" NGO. Today
they announced that their adherents are people supporting the ideas
of the Armenian National Movement and are ready to "transfer the
tendency to be the first in the political arena with the readiness
to be the last," says their announcement.

Nikol Pashinyan claims that this initiative is an alliance of people
of the same ideology and approaches which will allow the citizens to
vote judging by the program provisions and not by the appearance or
other factors.

The Alternative Initiators are sure of their success and they are
ready to cooperate. They issued a number of documents on social,
economic, political issues, assessments on the Karabakh conflict
regulation and outcomes of the difficult situations.

Asked the secret of their activity in comparison with other groups
existing in 2000, Aghasy Enoqyan answered, "This is not an alliance
of parties but a unity of individuals. The failure of former formats
was determined by the formats as their were conflicts inside each
party. We have distinct plan of activities and there is no doubt our
plan will work." By the way, the initiative intends to apply all the
means of struggle – referendums, rallies, etc.

Report on Armenian Penitentiary Institutions Presented in Yerevan

REPORT ON ARMENIAN PENITENTIARY INSTITUTIONS PRESENTED IN YEREVAN

Panorama.am
19:04 05/10/06

YEREVAN, 5 October 2006 – The results of a monitoring of Armenian
prisons in 2005, the conditions and treatment of prisoners, were
presented in Yerevan today.

Prepared by the Public Monitoring Group, it focuses on the medical
services and food the inmates receive, psychological problems, contact
with the outside world, daily exercises, as well as the prevention
of torture and inhumane treatment, and prison personnel.

The Group was established under the Justice Ministry to observe the
rights of detainees and is supported by the OSCE.

"This year’s report is a big step forward for the Public Monitoring
Group, because it offers more concrete facts, recommendations and
analysis," said Silvia Pogolsa, Human Rights Officer at the OSCE Office
in Yerevan. "I also welcome the constructive co-operation offered
by the Justice Ministry, which provided essential responses and took
into consideration many recommendations suggested by the Group."

Mikhael Baghdasaryan, the Head of the Public Monitoring Group, added:
"Our monitoring revealed that the Ministry implemented some of the
recommendations we made in our 2004 report. We hope that the points
outlined in this report will also be adequately considered and help
improve the conditions of the prisoners."

A practical guide for NGOs on monitoring places of detention elaborated
by the Association of the Prevention of Torture and the OSCE Office for
Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) was also presented. It
has been translated into Armenian with the help of the OSCE Office
and ODIHR.

The OSCE Office in Yerevan together with the Open Society Institute
Armenia Foundation have been providing support to the Public Monitoring
Group since 2004.

Boycot

Dagblad Tubantia/Twentsche Courant, Netherland
October 6, 2006

Boycot

Van de ‘Partij van de Allochtonen’ is de grootste oppositiepartij
veranderd in de ‘Partij van de Armeense kwestie’. Want vooral de PvdA
heeft zich de woede op de hals gehaald van de Turkse gemeenschap in
Nederland, door een kandidaat- Kamerlid van Turkse afkomst te
schrappen. De PvdA eist dat elke kandidaat voor de Tweede Kamer
erkent dat Turkije in 1915 tienduizenden Armeniers de dood injoeg.
Ook het CDA heeft om die redenen twee Turkse kandidaten van haar
kandidatenlijst geschrapt.

Dat de kwestie tot hevige emoties leidt, is niet verbazingwekkend. In
Turkije is het erkennen van deze volkerenmoord strafbaar, en zijn de
gebeurtenissen van destijds onbespreekbaar. Ook veel Nederlandse
Turken zijn in die wetenschap opgegroeid.

Het is echter in het belang van alle betrokkenen, dat de discussie
zich niet blijft beperken tot woede en teleurstelling. Immers: alleen
een inhoudelijk debat kan tot verdergaand inzicht leiden.

Zo roept de handelwijze van PvdA en CDA de vraag op waar eigen
verantwoordelijkheid eindigt en fractiediscipline begint. Wordt een
kandidaat-politicus beroofd van zijn vrijheid van meningsuiting
indien hij een aantal feiten moet erkennen? Zijn Turkse politici
monddood gemaakt?

Het antwoord op die vragen moet ontkennend luiden. Nee, feiten zijn
vaststaande, bewezen geachte gegevens. Van leden van de Tweede Kamer
mag worden verwacht dat ze de feiten kennen en onderschrijven. Welke
betekenis men vervolgens aan die feiten toekent, kan in debat worden
uitgemaakt.

Het belangrijkste verwijt dat PvdA en CDA treft, valt daarom
nauwelijks te onderbouwen. Al in 2004 onderschreef de PvdA- fractie
een motie waarin werd uitgesproken dat er sprake was van genocide op
het Armeense volk. Voor de Turkse achterban kan dit standpunt
onmogelijk een verrassing zijn.

Het risico dat PvdA en CDA zetels verliezen door hun principiele
uitspraak, mag met recht geen rol spelen bij het bepalen van een
standpunt. Partijen moeten helder zijn over hun bedoelingen, ook als
dat stemmen kost. Alleen dan weet de kiezer waar hij aan toe is.

Armenian MP To File A Protest To The Central Electoral Commission Of

ARMENIAN MP TO FILE A PROTEST TO THE CENTRAL ELECTORAL COMMISSION OF GEORGIA

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 4 2006

Member of the Georgian Parliament elected from Tsalka region
Hayk Meltonyan is going to file a protest to the Central Electoral
Commission of Georgia. The reason of the protest is the obvious fraud
of the voters’ lists.

The number of voters in the list compiled by the Regional Central
Electoral Commission of Tsalka was artificially increased. However,
parallel to this the number of Armenian voters was reduced.