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Sarkozy Is Satan: Turks Respond Angrily After France Approves Genoci

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  • Sarkozy Is Satan: Turks Respond Angrily After France Approves Genoci

    SARKOZY IS SATAN: TURKS RESPOND ANGRILY AFTER FRANCE APPROVES GENOCIDE LAW ON ARMENIA

    Daily Mail
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2091112/Nicolas-Sarkozy-Satan-Turks-respond-angrily-France-approves-Armenia-genocide-law.html
    Jan 24 2012
    UK

    Turkish Prime Minister calls the law 'discriminatory and racist'

    Turkey refutes Armenian claims that 1.5 million Armenians were killed
    in 1915 as the Ottoman Empire broke up

    Law would mean anyone who denies or 'outrageously minimize' the
    killings faces up to a year in prison and a fine of ~@45k Riot police
    guard French consulate in Turkey as tensions mount

    By Daily Mail Reporter

    Turkey threatened the France with retaliation after a controversial
    bill to make it a crime to deny the mass murder of Armenians by the
    Ottoman Turks moved a step closer to becoming law.

    Turkey sees the allegations of genocide in 1915 as the Ottoman Empire
    imploded as a threat to its national honour, insisting estimates of
    the scale of the killing is exaggerated.

    And the country reacted furiously when France's parliament approved
    the legislation on Monday.

    Sarkozy, whose party supported the bill, is now expected to sign the
    bill into law by February.

    Turkish press headlines slammed Sarkozy: '(He) massacred democracy,'
    read the banner headline of the leading Hurriyet newspaper while the
    Sozcu daily blasted 'Sarkozy the Satan.'

    The law has also risked more sanctions from Turkey and is complicating
    an already delicate relationship with the rising power.

    Turkey has already suspended military, economic and political ties,
    and briefly recalled its ambassador last month when the lower house
    of parliament approved the same bill.

    Turkey's Foreign Ministry strongly condemned the decision, saying the
    law should not be finalized to 'avoid this being recorded as part
    of France's political, legal and moral mistakes.' If the law is
    signed, 'we will not hesitate to implement, as we deem appropriate,
    the measures that we have considered in advance,' Turkey's Foreign
    Ministry said. It did not elaborate on the measures.

    Armenians believe about 1.5 million Christian Armenians were killed
    in what is now eastern Turkey during the First World War and this
    was part of a deliberate policy of genocide ordered by the Ottoman
    Turk government.

    The majority of Turks argue that there was a heavy loss of life on
    both sides during the fighting in the area, and that mass killing
    was inevitable result of newly industrialised warfare.

    The debate surrounding the measure comes in the highly charged run-up
    to France's presidential elections this spring, and critics have
    called the move a ploy by Sarkozy to garner the votes of the some
    500,000 Armenians who live in France.

    'It is further unfortunate that the historical ... relations
    between the Republic of Turkey and France have been sacrificed to
    considerations of political agenda,' Turkey said. 'It is quite clear
    where the responsibility for this lies.'

    Officials in Sarkozy's conservative government were in damage-control
    mode on Tuesday, appealing to Turkey's government to keep its calm.

    'As foreign minister, I think this initiative was a bit inopportune.

    But the parliament has thus decided. What I'd like to do today is
    call on our Turkish friends to keep their composure,' Foreign Minister
    Alain Juppe said on Canal Plus TV.

    'After this wave that has been a little bit excessive, I have to
    say I'm convinced that we will return to constructive relations -
    I extend my hand, I hope it will be taken one day.'

    France's relations with Turkey are already strained, in large part
    because Sarkozy opposes Turkey's entry into the European Union.

    The law is likely to further sour relations with a NATO member that is
    playing an increasingly important role in the international community's
    response to the violence in Syria, the standoff over Iran's nuclear
    program and peace negotiations in the Middle East.

    The Senate voted 127 to 86 to pass the bill late Monday. Twenty-four
    abstained. The measure sets a punishment of up to one year in prison
    and a fine of ~@45,000 for those who deny or 'outrageously minimize'
    the killings

    For some in France, the bill is part of a tradition of legislation
    in some European countries, born of the agonies of the Holocaust,
    that criminalizes the denial of genocides. Denying the Holocaust is
    already a punishable crime in France.

    Most historians contend that the 1915 killings of 1.5 million Armenians
    as the Ottoman Empire broke up was the 20th century's first genocide,
    and several European countries recognize the massacres as such.

    Switzerland has convicted people of racism for denying the genocide.

    But Turkey says that there was no systematic campaign to kill Armenians
    and that many Turks also died during the chaotic disintegration of
    the empire. It also says that death toll is inflated.

    Some Turks said Turkey should retaliate in kind. Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused the French of 'genocide'
    during France's 132-year colonial rule in Algeria.

    'I think our country should have retaliated in the same way after the
    French Bill has passed,' Yilmaz Sesen, a chemist, told AP television
    in Ankara. 'They have committed genocide in North Africa, and not
    too long ago either.'

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