The Turkish film Blood
2014年8月23日Tehlirian was defended by three defence attorneys, including Dr. Kurt cheap jerseys Niemeyer, professor of Law at Cologne University.
The defense attorneys made no attempt to deny the fact that Tehlirian had killed a man. It took the jury slightly over an hour to render a verdict of "not guilty". Tehlirian was tried and acquitted of all charges by the German court. [1] [2]The trial was an important influence on Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin, who found it interesting that while Tehlirian was being tried for killing one man, someone who killed more than a million men could not be brought to justice under the international law of the time.[3]The French film "Mayrig" (1992, dir. Henri Verneuil) depicts Tehlirian (actor Denis Podalyds) and some events related to his trial.
The Turkish film Blood on the Wall is a highly fictional depiction of the Tehlirian’s trial.
^ "Trial of Soghomon TehlirianFirst Afternoon". Armeniapedia. Retrieved 20070204. The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response. New York: Perennial. pp. A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide. Harper Perennial. pp. "While Tehlirian awaited trial in Berlin, Raphael Lemkin, a twentyone yearold Polish Jew studying linguistics at the University of Lvov, came upon a short news item on Talaat’s assassination in the local paper. Lemkin was intrigued and brought the case to the attention of one of his professors. Lemkin asked why the Armenians did not have Talaat arrested for the massacre. The professor said there was no law under which he could be arrested. "It is a crime for Tehlirian to kill a man, but it is not a crime for his oppressor to kill cheap nfl jerseys more than a million men?" Lemkin asked. "This is most inconsistent."" References
The defense attorneys made no attempt to deny the fact that Tehlirian had killed a man. It took the jury slightly over an hour to render a verdict of "not guilty". Tehlirian was tried and acquitted of all charges by the German court. [1] [2]The trial was an important influence on Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin, who found it interesting that while Tehlirian was being tried for killing one man, someone who killed more than a million men could not be brought to justice under the international law of the time.[3]The French film "Mayrig" (1992, dir. Henri Verneuil) depicts Tehlirian (actor Denis Podalyds) and some events related to his trial.
The Turkish film Blood on the Wall is a highly fictional depiction of the Tehlirian’s trial.
^ "Trial of Soghomon TehlirianFirst Afternoon". Armeniapedia. Retrieved 20070204. The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response. New York: Perennial. pp. A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide. Harper Perennial. pp. "While Tehlirian awaited trial in Berlin, Raphael Lemkin, a twentyone yearold Polish Jew studying linguistics at the University of Lvov, came upon a short news item on Talaat’s assassination in the local paper. Lemkin was intrigued and brought the case to the attention of one of his professors. Lemkin asked why the Armenians did not have Talaat arrested for the massacre. The professor said there was no law under which he could be arrested. "It is a crime for Tehlirian to kill a man, but it is not a crime for his oppressor to kill cheap nfl jerseys more than a million men?" Lemkin asked. "This is most inconsistent."" References
コメント