Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kouchner: Recognition of The Genocide shouldn't hamper relations

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kouchner: Recognition of The Genocide shouldn't hamper relations

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Kouchner: France's recognition of Armenian Genocide shouldn't hamper
    relations with Turkey
    06.10.2007 15:59 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The French and Turkish Foreign Ministers agreed that
    their countries have more similarities than differences and that
    continued dialogue between the two nations has the potential to
    improve relations. Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan and his guest,
    French Foreign Minister and Minister of European Affairs Bernard
    Kouchner, were speaking at a press conference Friday during a visit by
    Kouchner to Ankara. Babacan said the French Foreign Minister was
    informed that Turkey does not want to be dragged into discussions
    about the future of the EU and awaits the fulfillment of European
    promises made to it. The two were set to have a second round of talks
    in the evening, when, according to Babacan, they would discuss Turkish
    and French interests in other countries, especially the Middle East.

    Kouchner was also scheduled to visit President Abdullah Gul and Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, where discussions were expected to
    focus on issues such as a `committee of wise men' and `privileged
    partnership.' Babacan informed Kouchner about Turkey's unwillingness
    to even discuss the possibility of a status other than full membership
    in the European Union, Zaman reports.

    As to the French bill criminalizing the Armenian Genocide denial, the
    French Foreign Minister claimed in the press conference that the law
    will not cause any difficulty between Turkey and France and that
    nothing has been decided upon yet. The committee of wise men France is
    supposed to discuss the future strategies and boundaries of the
    EU. France also asks that this committee work on the Mediterranean
    Union that France wants to see Turkey a part of.

    In an interview with the Milliyet newspaper, Kouchner said that France
    recently went through a difficult period in its relations with Turkey
    and that his visit should be regarded as a symbol of a mutual desire
    to give a strong new impetus to relations between the two. Kouchner is
    the first high-level French official to visit Ankara since Nicolas
    Sarkozy, a staunch opponent of Turkey's EU accession, was elected
    president in May. Sarkozy has repeatedly said Turkey does not belong
    in the EU, arguing that it is geographically in Asia.
    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X