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Turkey Protests Cyprus-France Military Accord

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  • Turkey Protests Cyprus-France Military Accord

    TURKEY PROTESTS CYPRUS-FRANCE MILITARY ACCORD

    Assyrian International News Agency, CA
    March 1 2007

    ISTANBUL (AP) -- Turkey protested a military cooperation accord
    signed between France and Cyprus, saying Thursday that it threatened
    stability in the eastern Mediterranean and would affect efforts to
    reach a solution to the Cyprus problem.

    The French Defense Ministry confirmed that a military agreement
    with Cyprus was signed in Paris on Monday during a visit by the
    Cypriot foreign minister, but did not provide further details. The
    French Foreign Ministry said the accord was "standard" between two
    EU members and that it involved military training and information-
    and knowledge-sharing.

    Turkey has vowed to defend the interests of Turkish Cypriots, and
    stations some 40,000 troops on the north of the divided island.

    "France's signing of a military agreement with the Southern Cypriot
    Greek Administration is a worrying development," Turkey's Foreign
    Ministry said in a statement Thursday. It said the accord contradicted
    previous agreements on the island's status and "represented a threat
    to the stability and security of the Eastern Mediterranean."

    Tensions over the status of Cyprus, an EU member, have thrown Turkey's
    European Union membership bid into disarray.

    Turkey props up a government in northern Cyprus that no other country
    in the world recognizes, and it refuses to recognize the Greek Cypriot
    administration as the primary authority on the island.

    This has also been a period of heightened tension in Turkish-French
    relations. France's parliament voted in October to approve a bill
    that would criminalize denying that the mass killings of Armenians
    by Turks at the beginning of the 20th century was genocide, prompting
    Turkish trade organizations to call for a boycott of French companies
    and the Turkish military to say it would break off all contacts with
    its French counterparts.

    Turkey vehemently denies that it committed genocide against Armenians,
    saying they were killed in interethnic fighting as the Ottoman Empire
    collapsed.
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