Los Angeles Times

Debating genocide denial

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Ina March 5 editorial, The Times opposed a bill in the French parliament that would have made it a crime to deny the Armenian genocide. The bill was proposed by President Nicolas Sarkozy, then struck down by France’s Constituti­onal Council. Now Sarkozy says he wants to revive it.

Reader Berj Proodian wrote suggesting that The Times may have been hypocritic­al on the subject:

“In the past year, the L.A. Times has printed [several] editorials condemning France’s law against denying the Armenian genocide. Many Western European democracie­s (including France) have had laws against denying the Holocaust for a couple of decades now. If it is unconstitu­tional to punish those who deny the Armenian genocide, then how can democracie­s justify denial of the Holocaust to be a criminal offense? I don’t remember the L.A. Times ever speaking up against that.” Times Editorial Page Editor Nicholas Goldberg responds:

We have editoriali­zed consistent­ly in recent years against laws that ban Holocaust denial and otherwise stifle free expression. As far back as October 2006, for instance, we wrote the following about another law that would have made it an offense to deny the Armenian genocide: “This matches similar laws across the EU criminaliz­ing Holocaust denial. Both notions exhibit an unseemly lack of confidence in the free competitio­n of ideas and leave European government­s open to charges of hypocrisy.”

In 2009, we criticized Germany’s law banning Holocaust denial along with another one making it illegal to publish “Mein Kampf,” Adolf Hitler’s autobiogra­phical manifesto. We wrote: “Those rules were put in place with the best of intentions.... But liberal democracy cannot tolerate such bans on free expression indefinite­ly.”

The Holocaust and the Armenian genocide are historical facts. The editorial board has no doubt that they occurred and has often said that they were monstrous crimes that the world should not forget. But we do not believe that banning speech is the most effective way to get that message across.

Dictatorsh­ips often rely on censorship, making it illegal to express unpopular or unacceptab­le points of view. But democracie­s like France, Germany and the United States should have robust freedom of speech laws that include protection­s even for outrageous, hurtful and ahistorica­l opinions.

 ?? Yoan Valat EPA ?? THE FRENCH parliament approved a bill on denial of the Armenian genocide law, but it was struck down.
Yoan Valat EPA THE FRENCH parliament approved a bill on denial of the Armenian genocide law, but it was struck down.

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