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Turkey Downplays Suspension In Pipeline Talks With France

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  • Turkey Downplays Suspension In Pipeline Talks With France

    TURKEY DOWNPLAYS SUSPENSION IN PIPELINE TALKS WITH FRANCE

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 6, 2007 Friday 2:57 PM GMT

    Turkey's suspension of talks with Gaz de France on the French firm's
    possible participation in a major gas pipeline is not a final decision,
    a foreign ministry official said Friday.

    The official was commenting on a press report Thursday that the
    state-owned oil and gas company BOTAS had suspended talks with GDF in
    reaction to a French bill calling for jail sentences for those who
    deny that Ottoman Turks committed genocide against Armenians during
    World War I.

    "This is not a final decision. We understand that the negotiating
    process has not yet come to an end," the diplomat told AFP on condition
    of anonymity.

    "This is a commercial issue between companies and they will make the
    final decision on the basis of financial considerations," he added.

    The five-company Nabucco consortium involving BOTAS plans to build
    a 3,300-kilometre (2,000-mile) pipeline that will carry natural gas
    from the Middle East and Central Asia to the European Union via Turkey
    and the Balkans, bypassing Russia.

    The other partners are Austria's oil and gas group OMV, Hungary's MOL,
    Bulgaria's Bulgargaz and Romania's Transgaz.

    The consortium is seeking a sixth partner in the six-billion-dollar
    (4.5-billion-euro) project, expected to become operational in 2012.

    The other partners reportedly approved GDF's participation, but
    BOTAS has opposed it because of the French draft law on the Armenian
    massacres.

    The bill was adopted by the National Assembly in Paris in October but
    must still go before the upper-house Senate, then back to the lower
    house before becoming law.

    Turkey had at the time threatened unspecified measures against the
    bill, which followed a 2001 resolution by the French parliament
    recognising the killings as genocide.

    In November, the Turkish army froze bilateral military ties with
    France over the bill.

    The foreign ministry official said "there is no problem in what has
    been scheduled in the political and diplomatic field between Turkey
    and France."

    Senior Turkish and French diplomats will meet for consultations in
    the coming weeks, he said, adding that it is up to the army to revise
    its own decision on military relations.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in orchestrated
    killings between 1915 and 1917 in the final years of the Ottoman
    Empire.

    Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says thousands of
    Turks and Armenians were killed in civil strife when Armenians took
    up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
    troops invading the crumbling empire.
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