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Turkey Warns France Over Armenian Genocide Bill

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  • Turkey Warns France Over Armenian Genocide Bill

    TURKEY WARNS FRANCE OVER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL
    Angelique Chrisafis in Paris

    The Guardian
    Wednesday October 11, 2006

    The French parliament has been warned it could undermine relations
    between the EU and Turkey if it passes a law tomorrow making it a
    crime to deny Armenians suffered genocide at the hands of Ottoman
    Turks during the first world war.

    The draft bill, which is to be debated by the national assembly, was
    put forward by France's opposition Socialist party, and recommends
    that anyone who denies the mass-murder of Armenians between 1915
    and 1917 was genocide should face a year in prison and a â~B¬45,000
    (£30,500) fine.

    Olli Rehn, the commissioner in charge of Turkey's EU membership
    negotiations, warned this week the law could have "serious
    consequences" for EU relations with Turkey. He said it would jeopardise
    efforts by Turkish intellectuals to develop an open debate on the
    Armenian question.

    Ankara has deemed it ironic that France is preparing to punish those
    who express a particular view of history at a time when Turkey is under
    heavy EU pressure to change some of its own laws which are viewed
    as restricting freedom of expression. The Turkish prime minister,
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, yesterday referred to the proposed law as a
    "systematic lie machine". Turkey recalled its ambassador to France in
    May after the Socialist party first presented the bill in parliament.

    Turkish politicians have since warned that French-Turkish trade links
    will suffer if the bill is adopted, and some are discussing possible
    retaliatory measures, including criminalising the denial of genocide in
    Algeria which France ruled from 1830 to 1962. One Turkish MP suggested
    expelling all illegal Armenian immigrants if the bill was passed.

    Mr Erdogan said he would not engage in tit-for-tat measures but
    said France should reexamine its colonial past before pronouncing on
    history elsewhere.

    He repeated calls to Armenia to jointly research the killings by
    opening the historical archives of both countries to historians.

    Turkey's official policy is to acknowledge that large numbers of
    Armenians were killed by Turks, but to reject the overall estimate
    of 1.5 million deaths as inflated. It maintains that deaths occurred
    as part of civil unrest during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and
    thousands of Turks also died. Saying otherwise in Turkey can lead to
    criminal prosecution.

    Yesterday Turkey's foremost Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, who has
    been repeatedly tried for "insulting Turkishness" by urging Turkey
    to come clean on its part in the massacres, said passing the French
    law would be a mistake. "I will go to France to protest against this
    madness and violate the [new] law if I see it necessary. And I will
    commit the crime to be prosecuted there so that these two irrational
    mentalities can race to put me into jail," he told Reuters. He said
    the French draft law and the Armenian issue was being exploited by
    those in France and the EU opposed to Turkey's EU entry.

    Other Turkish writers criticised the French bill, including Elif
    Shafak, who was acquitted last month after she was charged with
    "insulting Turkishness" over one of her fictitious characters who
    referred to the Armenian "genocide".

    --Boundary_(ID_jiZE6ezgOoYr EPxgL6OByA)--
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