The July 1995 genocide in Bosnia was carried out by Serbian troops, and led to the deaths of 8,000 people, mainly men and boys. At the same time as the killings, up to 30,000 women, children and elderly people were forcibly removed from the territory.
The new law, which justice minister Koen Geens said he expects to be passed by parliament after the Easter break, does not apply only to those two events, however. The proposal makes it a criminal offence to “deny, minimise, justify or approve of genocides, crimes against humanity or war crimes recognised as such by an international tribunal”.
Both of the genocides mentioned have been the subject of proceedings by special UN tribunals and by the International Criminal Court in The Hague. The law would also apply in the event of future genocides.
The genocide of the Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire during and after the First World War is not covered by the new law. Officially, the reason is because it has never been dealt with by an international tribunal. Unofficially, the subject is a bone of diplomatic contention with the government of Turkey, which has always denied the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians took place.
Holocaust denial, meanwhile, is already outlawed in Belgium, Geens said. “The negationist law of 1995 will not change,” he said. “That remains reserved for the very exceptional, horrific nature of the Holocaust, so that there might not be the slightest impression of putting things into perspective.”
Alan Hope
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