DIE PRESSE: Der norwegische Attentäter soll zur Beobachtung in eine psychiatrische Klinik eingewiesen werden. Sie erhoffen sich neue Erkenntnisse über seine Psyche. Ein erstes Gutachten hatte Breivik für unzurechnungsfähig erklärt. » | Ag. | Mittwoch 25. Januar 2012
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
DIE PRESSE: Der norwegische Attentäter soll zur Beobachtung in eine psychiatrische Klinik eingewiesen werden. Sie erhoffen sich neue Erkenntnisse über seine Psyche. Ein erstes Gutachten hatte Breivik für unzurechnungsfähig erklärt. » | Ag. | Mittwoch 25. Januar 2012
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home computers,
laptop
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economy,
European Union,
Turkey
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Mitt Romney,
Nancy Pelosi,
Newt Gingrich
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Mitt Romney,
Newt Gingrich
THE WEASHINGTON POST: The most important figure in Tuesday night’s State of the Union address wasn’t on the House floor. In fact, he hasn’t taken a seat in front of the chamber in 13 years.
But as he campaigned for the Republican presidential nomination in Florida, former House speaker Newt Gingrich was doing more to boost President Obama’s reelection prospects than anything Obama himself could do. While Obama was using the speech to portray the Republicans as plutocrats, Gingrich was doing all he could to prove the caricature true. Read on and comment » | Dana Milbank | Opinion Writer | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
RT: In a move that has triggered outrage, Google has announced plans to bring all data collected from users’ separate accounts on its sites into a combined profile. Besides raising dubious questions about privacy, this offer is one you… cannot refuse.
The changes will take effect on March 1. Before that date, Google will notify its hundreds of millions of users about the new rules of the game. In preparation, the company is boosting its privacy policy and terms of service. Users will have to decide whether to agree with the new terms – or lose access to some of their favorite sites. There is no way of opting out of the changes.
Some say Google’s privacy announcement is frustrating and a little frightening."Even if the company believes that tracking users across all platforms improves their services, consumers should still have the option to opt out,” said Common Sense Media chief executive James Steyer, as cited by the Washington Post.
Google says the new policy reflects a “desire to create a simple product experience” that does what one needs, when one needs it. The changes, apparently, will also allow Google to offer more new services and other “cool things.” » | Wednesday, January 25, 2012
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RT,
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THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has chosen a Kremlin-bankrolled satellite TV channel known for its relentless anti-Western propaganda to broadcast his new talk show.
RT, a Moscow-based channel formerly known as Russia Today, said on Wednesday it had secured exclusive first broadcast rights for Mr Assange’s new 10-part interview show ‘The World Tomorrow.’
“Details of the episodes and the guests featured are secret for now,” RT said in a statement, adding it was proud to be associated with the WikiLeaks founder.
On bail in the UK with strict limits on his freedom of movement pending possible extradition to Sweden on sex crime charges he denies, RT said Mr Assange would interview "’iconoclasts, visionaries and power insiders’" – people Assange can clearly identify with, being a rather controversial figure himself.”
“The 40-year-old Australian media and internet entrepreneur will get to talk about the issues of the day with those he believes will shape the world tomorrow. » | Andrew Osborn, Moscow | Wednesday, January 25, 2012
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RT,
Russia,
whistleblower
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David Cameron,
human rights
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Embarrassing, inaccurate or simply personal data will have to be deleted from the internet and company databases if consumers ask, under a new set of European laws.
The move will mean that social networks such as Facebook or Twitter will have to comply with users' requests to delete everything they have ever published about themselves online. It will also mean that consumers will be able to force companies that hold data about them, such as for Tesco's Clubcard, to hand it over or remove it.
The changes, which could take more than two years to implement, also include a new EU power to fine companies up to 2 per cent of their global turnover if they breach the rules. Read on and comment » | Matt Warman, Consumer Technology Editor | Wednesday, January 25, 2012
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European Union,
Facebook,
Twitter
SEATTLE POST INTELIGENCER: DAVOS, Switzerland (AP) — A four-year economic crisis has left societies battered and widened the gap between the haves and have-nots, financial leaders conceded Wednesday — with one suggesting that Western-style capitalism itself may be endangered.
As Europe struggles with its debt crisis and the global economic outlook remains gloomy at best, there's a sense at the heavily guarded World Economic Forum that free markets are on trial.
Many at the elite economic gathering in the Swiss Alps accept that more must be done to convince critics that Western capitalism has a future and that it can learn from its massive failures.
For David Rubenstein, the co-founder and managing director of asset management firm Carlyle Group, leaders must work fast to overcome the current crisis or else different models of capitalism, such as the form practiced in China, may win the day.
"As a result of this recession, that's lasted longer than anyone predicted and will probably go on for a number more years ... we're going to have a lot of economic disparities," Rubenstein said. "We've got to work through these problems. If we don't do in three or four years ... the game will be over for the type of capitalism that many of us have lived through and thought was the best type." » | Pan Pylas, AP Business Writer | Wednesday, January 25, 2012
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capitalism,
Davos,
WEF
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independence,
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MAIL ONLINE: Billionaire New York investor warns of impending economic meltdown / Backs euro and buys Italian bonds from Jon Corzine's failed MF Global / Warns it's 'difficult to know right decisions to make' after boom years / Supports Occupy Wall Street, Democrats and Obama re-election efforts
Billionaire investor George Soros has warned the global economic system could collapse and riots on the streets of America are on the way.
The 81-year-old said he’d rather survive than stay rich as the world faces an ‘evil’ period and Europe fights a ‘descent into chaos and conflict’.
He has backed the euro, bought $2billion in European bonds and insisted the economic climate is similar to the 1930s Great Depression.
‘The euro must survive because the alternative - a breakup - would cause a meltdown that Europe, the world, can’t afford,’ he told Newsweek.
‘The situation is about as serious and difficult as I’ve experienced in my career. We are facing now a general retrenchment in the developed world.’
His warnings came as U.S. stocks dipped on Tuesday, with talks to resolve Greece's debt crisis faltering and threatening a five-day winning streak. » | Mark Duell | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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global economy
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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John F Kennedy
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Libya
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Armenian genocide,
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Turkey
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Egypt
THE JERUSALEM POST: Islamic-based anti-Semitism present among German Muslims
BERLIN - The German government released on Monday the findings of a two year inquiry into modern anti-Semitism in the Federal Republic, showing that latent anti-Semitism affects one of every five Germans.
The 202 page study, entitled "Anti-Semitism in Germany," covered a wide spectrum of German anti-Semitism, including hatred of the Jewish state as a manifestations of anti-Semitism within the Left movement and Islamic-animated loathing of Israel and Jews, especially from Iran's regime and the Turkish media.
Dr. Wahied Wahdat-Hagh, a member of the ten member commission, told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday, that the "experts came to the conclusion that the ideology of the Iranian regime is anti-Semitic." According to the report, "The state anti-Semitism is, however, not only relevant on the propaganda level" in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The study notes that Iran's anti-Semitic ideology plays a role in Germany.
When asked what the report means by Iran's regime not limiting its anti-Semitism to its domestic agenda, Wahdat-Hagh said, Iran supports foreign anti-Semitic entities "militarily, financially and ideologically." He cited the Lebanese group Hezbollah, Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ).
In Germany the strong presence of Iran's regime is located in Hamburg. "In view of the facts that the political head of Iran is also considered a spiritual figure for many extremist thinking Muslims," wrote the commission's authors. The study says that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader in Iran, is the sponsor of the Islamic Center in Hamburg (IZH).
According to one commission member, Dr. Juliane Wetzel, hyperbolic criticism of Israel as an expression of anti-Semitism exists between 40 and 50% of the population. However, Dr. Clemens Heni, a leading German scholar of contemporary German anti-Semitism, said Wetzel plays down the widespread form of anti-Israel anti-Semitism in the Federal Republic. » | Benjamin Weinthal, Jerusalem Post Correspondent | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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anti-Semitism,
Germany
CBN: JERUSALEM, Israel -- With Islamists poised to take over governments overthrown during the "Arab spring," Christians and other minorities may soon be subject to Sharia (Islamic) law.
Some say assurance by Islamist groups, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, Salafis, and Ennahda, that non-Muslims would not be mistreated under Sharia is, at best, questionable.
In Egypt, attacks on Coptic Christians have increased exponentially since the fall of Hosni Mubarak's regime last year.
Egyptian Christians have been beaten, shot and stabbed to death, and their homes and churches have been fire bombed by angry Muslims.
On Monday, Egypt's Islamist-dominated parliament held its first session. The Muslim Brotherhood now holds 47 percent of the seats, and the Salafist al-Nour party 25 percent.
Syrian Christians have also come under increasing persecution.
"The Christian community in Syria has been hit by a series of kidnappings and brutal murders; 100 Christians have now been killed since the anti-government unrest began," the Jerusalem Post quoted the Pakistan Christian Post. » | Tzippe Barrow | CBN News Internet Producer – Jerusalem | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Nicolas Sarkozy has apparently admitted that he is facing the end of his political career and may soon devote himself to "making money".
The French President reportedly made the admission as new polls suggest he will be defeated if, as expected, he stands for re-election in the Spring.
"In case of failure, I stop politics. Yes, that is a certainty," said Mr Sarkozy, 56. "Anyway, I'm at the end. In any case, for the first time in my life, I'm confronted by the end of my career."
The comments, which were made to key aides over the past few days and reported in Le Monde, also included the words: "I am not a dictator".
Mr Sarkozy has made it clear to political allies that he would like to follow in the footsteps of Tony Blair, who went on to make millions after stepping down as Prime Minister.
The President is said to have told his governmental colleagues: "Me too – in the future, I'd like to make money." » | Peter Allen in Paris | Tuesdaay, January 24, 2012
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France,
Nicolas Sarkozy
HÜRRIYET DAILY NEWS: Turkey expressed fury yesterday after the French Senate passed a bill criminalizing denials of the 1915 events as genocide in spite of threats from Ankara to punish Paris with “permanent” sanctions if the bill was passed.
“Turkey’s response to the adoption of the bill had long been decided. These measures will stay in place as long as the law stays in force,” Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu told reporters yesterday.
French senators passed the bill following a marathon session, with 127 legislators voting in favor of the bill and 86 voting against the motion in the legislature’s upper house, which has 348 members.
France’s lower house voted to make such denials a crime last month, prompting Turkey to suspended military, economic and political ties. With the motion’s passage through the Senate, Turkey is now expected to unveil a new raft of measures that will affect educational and cultural ties with France.
The bill will become law once it is approved by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and enters the Official Gazette.
Making a speech on behalf of the government, French Minister of Relations with Parliament Patrick Ollier said the bill complied with French and EU laws. Ollier said two “genocides” were now recognized by France.
“The denial of the Jewish genocide is penalized; [now we are making that] this possible for the Armenian genocide as well,” said Ollier. » | Hürriyet Daily News | ANKARA | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
HÜRRIYET DAILY NEWS: 'Genocide' bill 'null and void for us': Erdoğan » | Hurriyet.com.tr | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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Armenian genocide,
France,
Turkey
THE GUARDIAN: Employees in Florida and California will be allowed beards or goatees, providing they are kept short
After banishing them from its magical realms for six decades, Disneyland has finally taken pity on hirsute men seeking employment in the field of mouse collaboration.
A mere 12 years since it made the landmark decision to allow employees to emulate the late Walt by sporting moustaches, the famously image-conscious outfit has opened the doors of the kingdom to men with the right kind of facial hair.
From 3 February, employees in Florida and California will be allowed to report for duty with beards or goatees – providing they are less than a quarter of an inch long. » | Sam Jones | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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beards,
Walt Disney
HERALD SUN: PROMINENT Australians have urged their compatriots to fly the flag with pride, despite claims the national symbol is a sign of race hate.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Premier Ted Baillieu led the charge to dismiss a study suggesting Aussies who attached flags to their cars for Australia Day were more likely to have racist views.
But an Islamic leader claimed the country could not deny some flag-flying patriots were racist and that the flag had allegedly been used as a "weapon" against some Australians.
The flag furore follows neurosurgeon Dr Charles Teo's claim that racism still plagued Australia and migrants were victimised.
University of WA researchers found in a survey of 513 people last Australia Day that one in five attached flags to their cars, and that flag-flyers "tend to express more racist attitudes" than others. » | Wes Hosking, Aleks Devic with Stephen Drill | Herald Sun | Wednesday, January 25, 2012
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Australia,
national pride
THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: Maldives women face more repression under a rising tide of religious fundamentalism, reports Ben Doherty from Male.
When the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, visited the Maldives late last year, she urged that the practice of flogging women for having sex outside marriage - while very rarely punishing men for the same - should be abolished.
"This practice constitutes one of the most inhumane and degrading forms of violence against women," she told local reporters then.
The response was as fierce as it was unexpected. The next day protesters rallied outside the UN building, carrying placards that read "Ban UN" and "Islam is not a toy" and threatened to "Flog Pillay". A website later promised to "slaughter anyone against Islam".
Similar protests have followed, and a growing religious divide between moderate and fundamentalist Muslims - constitutionally, all Maldivians are obliged to follow Islam - has led many to question the direction of religion in the Maldives and, in particular, the place of women in Maldivian society.
In an interview with the Herald, the Maldivian President, Mohamed Nasheed, conceded an emergent religious fundamentalism had changed the way women were viewed, and treated, in his country. » | Wednesday, January 25, 2012
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Mitt Romney,
Newt Gingrich
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Florida,
US primaries
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Sir Salman Rushdie has launched a fierce attack on the Indian government for pandering to extremist Muslim groups and failing to protect freedom of speech after threats of violence forced him to withdraw from a top literature festival.
His planned appearance in conversation with a leading news presenter was cancelled at the last minute after the organisers of the Jaipur Literature Festival received death threats and the police warned of violence inside the venue and riots outside from Muslim protesters if it went ahead.
According to eyewitnesses, a group of around 50 Muslim men had infiltrated the crowd shortly before the session was due to begin an dwere intimidating members of the audience to give up their seats. Organisers were said to bewildered over how they managed to get past a bar code security pass system and hundreds of police.
Jaipur's police commissioner B. L Soni said protesters had earlier registered as delegates and were present inside in significant numbers.
In a television interview Sir Salman said he believed the government had sought to stop him from appearing at the festival to win Muslim votes in its key Uttar Pradesh state election campaign and had circuited [sic] “fantastically fishy” intelligence reports of assassination plots to stop him to force his withdrawal.
He said the arts were under assault from both Hindu and Muslim extremists and that “if it goes on, India will cease to be a free country.” India had been the first country in the world to ban his 1988 novel The Satanic Verses, ahead of Muslim countries which denounced it as ‘blasphemous’, and today lagged behind countries like Turkey, Egypt and Libya which have lifted the ban. » | Dean Nelson, New Delhi and Rachel Rickard Straus in Jaipur | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Sir Salman Rushdie prevented from speaking by video link at Jaipur literature festival: Sir Salman Rushdie was prevented from speaking to the Jaipur literature festival audience by video link today after a Muslim mob infiltrated the venue, the police warned of violence and the organisers received death threats. » | Dean Nelson, New Delhi | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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Salman Rushdie
BBC: Turkey has reacted with anger after the French Senate approved a bill making it a crime to deny genocide was committed by Ottoman Turks against Armenians during World War I.
The Turkish foreign ministry branded the decision "irresponsible" and threatened swift retaliatory measures.
Armenia says that up to 1.5 million people died in 1915-16 as the Ottoman empire split.
Turkey rejects the term genocide and says the number was much smaller.
The bill will now be sent to President Nicolas Sarkozy to be signed into law, which he is expected to do before the end of February.
'Total rupture'
Correspondents say the move threatens to cause a serious rift between France and Turkey, who are Nato allies.
"France opened a black page in its history," said Volkan Bozkir, head of the Turkish parliament's foreign affairs committee, on Twitter.
Turkey's ambassador to France, Tahsin Burcuoglu, said the vote could cause a "total rupture" of relations between the two countries. » | Monday, January 23, 2012
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DAILY EXPRESS: A HATE preacher once described as Osama Bin Laden’s “right hand man in Europe” could be freed from a UK jail in just two weeks.
Abu Qatada is fighting deportation to Jordan on terror charges from Long Lartin Prison in Worcester. He could be freed after a bail hearing set for February 6. » | Daily Express Reporter | Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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Abu Qatada
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TIMES: The nude photo of Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani has enraged several members of the Muslim community, particularly since one of the more principal tenets of Islamic fundamentalism has always been to ban women from any degree of nudity.
The decision by Farahani, therefore, is a bold one and one that has, predictably, sparked controversy across the world. However, she isn't the first Islamic actress who has shed her clothes and her inhibitions.
There are at least 3 others who have already bared it all, on different occasions, and faced similar criticism from conservative families and the religious community.
Who are these 4 actresses?
Golshifteh Farahani
Golshifteh Farahani, an Iranian actress whose nude photos were published in a magazine called Madame Le Figaro, has been banned from entering her native country, following a decision by the Iranian government. Farahani, who played a pivotal role in the Hollywood film "Body of Lies", opposite Leonardo Di Caprio, was then also condemned by the conservative Iranian regime for violating Islamic law by appearing without a hijab in a few scenes.
Meanwhile, Farahani is already living outside of Iran; she left the country last year to protect the strict rules mandated by Islamic law and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Iranian cinema. » | Sangeeta Mukherjee | Monday, January 23, 2012
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Iran,
Iranians in exile,
nudity
AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: Many young men and women are now protesting by the only means left: using their bodies - whether by burning or exposing.
New York, NY - Reflecting the public gesture of the Egyptian blogger Aliaa Magda Elmahdy, who posted naked pictures of herself late last year on her blog by way of a protest "against a society of violence, racism, sexism, sexual harassment and hypocrisy", a young Iranian actress now living in France, Golshifteh Farahani, has recently created a sensation in and out of her homeland, especially in the social networking cyber society, by posing half naked for Madame Le Figaro, and also appearing topless in a short black-and-white video clip. It's called "Corps et Ame [sic] [Corps et Âmes]/Bodies and Souls" and is produced by the prominent French fashion photographer and music video director Jean-Baptiste Mondino.
As with the case of Elmahdy and her compatriots, the nude picture and video clip of Farahani have sharply divided Iranians around the world; some celebrating her act as courageous, pathbreaking, dismantling ancient and sacrosanct taboos - and thus revolutionary, while others condemning her as opportunistic, obscene, immoral and damaging to the cause of liberty in Iran. The Islamic Republic has reportedly banned her from returning to her homeland.
Whence the outrage? In its widest sense, clothing is the civilising posture of humanity. No society, no community, no human gathering is devoid of one form of clothing or another as the formal decorum of becoming a full and public human being: it might be as little as a mere bamboo sheath around the groin or it might extend to fully covered veiling, without even the eyes visible to any intruding gaze. But clothing of one sort or another is definitive to all forms of civility.
Our manner of dressing ourselves is the most immediate habitat of our humanity - violently disrupted at times by tyrants who sought to give a different look to that humanity. When Reza Shah (who reigned in Iran from 1925 to 1941) banned the mode of "veiling" in Iran he had deemed unseemly to his vision of "modernity", there were women who remained home and never appeared in public until their dying day - because for them to appear in public without their habitual clothing was like forcing New Yorkers to go to work in their bikinis.
When Khomeini re-imposed that almost-forgotten manner of veiling decades later, generations of women had grown up entirely alien to that manner of veiling. Reza Shah and Khomeini - two tyrants interrupted by one weakling potentate - had fought their fateful battles over the site of our mothers' and daughters' bodies. » | Hamid Dabashi | Monday, January 23, 2012
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: As the president prepares his State of the Union address, the future looks more hopeful – the US economy is recovering, Republicans are weak and he is untainted by scandal.
The conventional wisdom in Washington decrees that Barack Obama should not have a prayer of re-election this year. Since the Great Depression, no United States president has won a second term when unemployment has been above 7.4 per cent.
For each of his three years in office it has been well above that, peaking at 10 per cent in 2010. But crucially for the White House, and for the country, this most vital indicator, the release of which unemployed workers and Washington’s army of pundits alike anticipate keenly every month, is moving in the right direction.
Unemployment is now at 8.5 per cent, the lowest since February 2009, Mr Obama’s first full month in office. And it is not the only encouraging number. Gross domestic product is creeping up, the stock market is nearly double the low reached following the financial debacle of autumn 2008 and consumer confidence is returning.
Republican activists and voters caught up in the excitement of their party’s primary campaign tend to assume rather gleefully that the sluggish economy will doom Obama to the ignominy of a single term. They lap up candidates’ routine denigrations of the president as a “radical” driving the United States to “European-style socialism”, and harp on the danger of the world’s most powerful economy facing a Greek-style collapse. » | Alex Spillius | Monday, January 23, 2012
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Barack Obama
Monday, January 23, 2012
LE POINT: La loi, déjà votée par l'Assemblée, est donc définitivement adoptée par le parlement français. Ankara a immédiatement exprimé sa colère.
L'issue du vote faisait peu de doutes. Le Sénat a adopté, lundi soir, la proposition de loi sur la négation des génocides, dont celui des Arméniens en 1915. Le ministre turc de la Justice Sadullah Ergin a qualifié ce vote de "manque total de respect" et de "grande injustice" à l'égard de la Turquie. Sur la chaîne d'information CNN Türk, immédiatement après l'adoption du texte, il a déclaré que, pour son pays, cette loi était "nulle et non avenue".
Le président de la Commission des Affaires étrangères du parlement turc, Volkan Bozkir, a pour sa part indiqué sur son compte Twitter que "la France a(vait) ouvert une page sombre de son histoire" en pénalisant la négation du génocide arménien sous l'Empire ottoman, de 1915 à 1917. L'ambassade turque à Paris a pour sa part annoncé des "conséquences permanentes" si la loi était promulguée. Continuez à lire et ajouter un commentaire » | LePoint.fr | lundi 23 janvier 2012
Verwandt »
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France,
génocide arménien,
Turquie
SCHWEIZER FERNSEHEN: Der Pariser Senat hat am Montag trotz aller Drohungen der Türkei ein neues Völkermordgesetz verabschiedet. Das Gesetz stellt die Leugnung von gesetzlich anerkannten Völkermorden unter Strafe.
Mit dem neuen Gesetz kann auch der Tod zahlloser Armenier während des Ersten Weltkriegs im Osmanischen Reich bestraft werden. Die Türkei als Nachfolger des Osmanischen Reiches streitet einen Völkermord ab und hat für den Fall einer Annahme des Gesetzes mit schweren Konsequenzen gedroht. » | dpa/gern | Montag 23. Januar 2012
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Armenier,
Frankreich,
Genozid,
Osmanisches Reich,
Türkei,
Völkermord
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