Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

French Socialist Leader Visits Armenia, Urges Genocide Recognition

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

  • French Socialist Leader Visits Armenia, Urges Genocide Recognition

    FRENCH SOCIALIST LEADER VISITS ARMENIA, URGES GENOCIDE RECOGNITION
    By Anna Saghabalian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Sept 6 2007

    Recognition of the Armenian genocide must be a precondition for
    Turkey's membership in the European Union, the first secretary of
    France's main opposition Socialist Party (PS) said during a visit to
    Armenia on Thursday.

    Francois Hollande arrived in Yerevan at the invitation of the governing
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), which has a
    warm rapport with his party. Official sources said Turkish-Armenian
    relations featured large during his separate talks with President
    Robert Kocharian, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian and Foreign Minister
    Vartan Oskanian.

    "It can't be possible for us to accept a country that has not addressed
    its historical record into Europe," Hollande said after the talks,
    expressing the PS's position on Turkey's membership in the EU.

    "We insist on that not to complicated but to facilitate Turkey's
    accession process."

    The comments echoed statements made by France's former President
    Jacques Chirac. "Should Turkey recognize the genocide of Armenia to
    join the European Union? Honestly, I believe so," during an official
    visit to Yerevan in September last year.

    Other EU leaders, however, have repeatedly spoken out against making
    Turkey's accession to the 25-nation bloc contingent on genocide
    recognition.

    Hollande reaffirmed his party's support for a Socialist-drafted bill
    that would it a crime in France to publicly state that the 1915-1918
    mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman did not constitute a genocide.

    The bill was adopted by the lower house of the French parliament
    last year despite vehement protests from Ankara. To become a law,
    it needs to be passed by the French Senate.

    Hollande denied that the PS initiative was aimed at winning the votes
    of France's sizable Armenian community. "It's not for electoral reasons
    that I make such a choice," he told a news conference. "This bill
    is a matter of solidarity and honor. This is more than an Armenian
    issue because if the genocide is not remembered, nobody will be able
    to guarantee that there will be no repeat of such tragic events."

    Hollande went on to urge Turkey to unconditionally establishment
    diplomatic relations and open its border with Armenia. A statement
    by the Armenian Foreign Ministry quoted him as telling Oskanian that
    this must happen "as soon as possible." It said Oskanian briefed
    him on Yerevan's position on Turkish-Armenian relations and the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Armenia's ties with France were also high on the agenda of the talks,
    with Kocharian saying that they are "strengthening every year" and
    encompassing new spheres. Hollande was cited by Kocharian's office
    as saying that the French Socialists are ready to assist in the
    "implementation of new programs and proposals aimed at developing
    cooperation between the two countries."
Working...
X