Ankara, 16. Oktober 2015: Türkische Menschenrechtsorganisationen kritisieren scharf das Urteil des Europäischen Gerichtshofs für Menschenrechte
18.10.2015 19:03
Die Menschenrechtsvereinigung der Türkei (IHD) sowie das Zentrum Wahrheit-Gerechtigkeit-Erinnerung (HAFIZA Merkez) bildeten in dem Verfahren Perincek vs. Schweiz gemeinsam mit dem kanadischen Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies (IGHRS, Toronto) eine Koalition, die der EGMR als Dritte Seite anerkannt hatte.
In einer Presseerklärung legen nun die beiden türkischen Menschenrechtsorganisationen eine substantiierte Kritik des Urteils vom 15. Oktober 2015 vor. Unter anderem werfen sie dem EGMR eine zu enge Auslegung von Artikel 10 der Europäischen Menschenrechtskonvention vor und beklagen, dass die Große Kammer des EGMR in ihrer Schlussentscheidung nicht die Auswirkungen des Urteils „in jenem Land, in dem der Genozid verübt wurde“, berücksichtigten:
„Die jüngste Entscheidung der Großen Kammer des Europäischen Menschenrechtsgerichtshofs wird in keiner Weise die Richtigkeit unserer Warnungen entkräften, wonach die Völkermordleugnung nicht allein in ihrer Bedeutung innerhalb der Schweizer Grenze betrachtet werden darf und dass sie Drohungen gegen die armenische Gesellschaft in der Türkei verstärken wird, einschließlich der Bedrohung des armenischen Lebensrechts. (…) Die Tatsache, dass das armenische Volk in der Türkei, dem Land der Leugnung, keine Sicherheit besitzt, zeigt sich in den Morden an Hrant Dink, Sevag Balıkçı, and Maritsa Küçük in Samatya, die alle in den letzten Jahren begangen wurden.“
Auch erinnern die türkischen Menschenrechtsorganisationen daran, dass aktuell Kurden in der Stadt Cizre in Lautsprecheransagen wie folgt bedroht werden: „Ihr seid Armenier, ihr seid alle Armenier, ihr seid armenische Bastarde!“
Downlad:
HRA-Memory Center on Grand Chamber ruling ( 69 kb)
THE ECHR’S RULING ON PERİNÇEK DOES NOT INVALIDATE
OUR REASONS FOR BECOMING INTERVENING PARTY
In the hearing on 15 October 2015, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights
pronounced its final ruling on Perinçek v. Switzerland, which was retried after the appeal to ECHR’s
previous decision. According to the ruling, the Grand Chamber found that Doğu Perinçek’s
declarations impugning the Armenian Genocide are protected by the freedom of expression, and
concluded that the Court of Lausanne violated the European Convention on Human Rights, clause 10
on the freedom of expression, by sentencing Doğu Perinçek on account of his statements.
Three human rights organizations, the Turkey-based Human Rights Association (HRA) and the Truth
Justice and Memory Center (the Memory Center), as well as the Toronto-based International
Institute for Genocide & Human Rights Studies (IIGHRS), appealed to the ECHR in July to present a
Third Party Intervention file to the Grand Chamber. After due consideration, the ECHR approved this
request.
As the HRA and the Memory Center, whose appeal to make a case was accepted by the ECHR, we
declare that the Grand Chamber’s ruling does not invalidate the rationale we presented in our Third
Party Intervention file.
The ECHR Grand Chamber’s recent verdict will by no means invalidate the veracity of our warnings
that genocide denial cannot be considered solely within Swiss borders and that it will exacerbate
threats against the Armenian society in Turkey, including their right to life.
The ECHR Grand Chamber deliberated on the issue from what can be called a technical point of view
and asked whether the Swiss court breached clause 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights
by convicting Perinçek on account of his declarations, concluding that the said events did not
constitute incitement to hatred within Swiss borders.
The consequences of the issue outside of Switzerland, especially in the country where the genocide
took place, were not taken into consideration. And yet, ECHR decisions are binding throughout the
confines of the European Council; they set a precedent. The decision will thus cause problems in the
resolution, in accordance with universal human rights laws, of the cases of human rights violations
caused by genocide denial in all of these countries, including Turkey.
In certain segments of the Turkish media, both the initial ECHR ruling in favor of Perinçek’s freedom
of expression and the Grand Chamber’s ruling on 15 October 2015 are presented as evidence for the
ECHR’s confirmation of the view that there was no Armenian Genocide; in other words, for their
claim that the ECHR also denies genocide.
The above constitutes a blatant and intentional distortion, and in fact a lie: blatant, because the
Grand Chamber decision has been published, for all to see. In the ruling, this lie is explicitly refuted in
Paragraph 102 of the section “The Scope of the Case”: “As regards the scope of the case, the Court
underlined that it was not required to determine whether the massacres and mass deportations
suffered by the Armenian people at the hands of the Ottoman Empire from 1915 onwards could be
characterised as genocide within the meaning of that term under international law; unlike the
international criminal courts, it had no authority to make legally binding pronouncements on this
point.” It is clear from this passage that the question of whether the mass deportations and
massacres of Ottoman Armenians constitute a genocide was left outside the scope of the case.
This prevarication, that the ruling of the ECHR Grand Chamber disproves the “claims” on the
Armenian Genocide, is intentional as well as blatant, because it aims to encourage individuals, circles,
and even public servants who provoke hatred against the Armenians in Turkey; it seeks to obstruct
investigations on such declarations or acts, and to prevent the perpetrators from being brought to
justice.
Most recently, special operations units’ announcements on the megaphone in Cizre, “You are
Armenian, you are all Armenians, you are Armenian bastards,” clearly demonstrate the connection
between the denial of the Armenian Genocide and the current living conditions of the Armenian
people, who are deprived of the security of life. As human rights defenders, we witness this
connection every single day. The fact that the Armenian people have no security of life in Turkey, a
country of denial, is evidenced by the murders of Hrant Dink, Sevag Balıkçı, and Maritsa Küçük in
Samatya, all of which took place in the last few years. In fact, these cases will most probably be taken
to the ECHR, which will in turn have to take into consideration the consequences of genocide denial
in Turkey.
The ruling of the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights was restricted to a narrow
interpretation of clause 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, and contented itself with
investigating whether Perinçek’s pronouncements (which were worded rather differently than the
violent language he uses in Turkey), “what was done does not constitute genocide,” fall within the
scope of the freedom of expression. Racism against Armenians in Turkey was included neither in the
ECHR’s deliberations, nor in the rationale for the ruling, as also evident in the ECHR press release on
the ruling. Furthermore, the decision was reached by 10 votes against 7, which demonstrates the
disagreement within the Grand Chamber on the question.
The Human Rights Association and the Memory Center will persevere, independently of the Grand
Chamber’s decision, in their efforts to confront the past, expose historical facts, and pave the way for
the restitution of justice in Turkey, as well as in their struggle—on the basis of the international law
of human rights—against genocide denial, which continues to threaten the lives of and incite hatred
against the Armenian community in Turkey.
HUMAN RIGHTS ASSOCIATION TRUTH JUSTICE MEMORY CENTER
16 October 2015
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