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ANKARA: Bill that poisoned relns w/Turkey will not pass the Senate

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  • ANKARA: Bill that poisoned relns w/Turkey will not pass the Senate

    Turkish News Agency
    Oct 24 2008


    BILL THAT POISONED RELATIONS WITH TURKEY WILL NOT PASS THE SENATE


    The French Senate will not adopt the bill aiming to criminalize the
    denial of the Armenian claims of genocide, a prominent leader in the
    French Senate told the Turkish Daily News yesterday.

    "This issue is over. It is impossible for the Senate to adopt this
    law," said Hubert Haenel, president of the Senate's Commission for
    European Union Affairs.

    In 2006 the French National Assembly adopted the bill criminalizing
    the denial of the mass killings of Armenians at the hands of the
    Ottomans as genocide.

    The bill would have to be passed by the Senate to become a law, but
    the vote in the lower house of the parliament dealt a heavy blow to
    bilateral relations.

    Haenel, in Turkey to attend a seminar titled, "The Republic in France
    and Turkey," at Bilgi University in Istanbul, told the TDN that the
    bill was blocked in the Senate, adding that French intellectual
    circles had also criticized the bill, as it prejudged the studies of
    historians. Haenel said the atmosphere between the two countries had
    changed, implying also that there was a different conjecture that
    would also make it difficult for the Senate to make a decision that
    would damage bilateral relations.

    France discovers Turkey's strategic importance

    Haenel, who spoke at the seminar organized jointly by the French
    Institute for Anatolian studies and the Institute of Political Studies
    of Grenoble, gave optimistic messages on France's outlook on
    Turkey. "The crown makes the king wiser," said Haenel, talking about
    French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is known to be a vocal opponent
    of Turkey's entry into the EU.

    "With all the crises going on near the borders of Turkey, the
    stand-off in the Caucasus being the most recent one, we rediscover
    Turkey's strategic importance," said the French senator. Referring to
    the meeting Sarkozy had with all the French ambassadors during the
    summer, Hanael said it was significant that the French president said
    during the meeting that French troops in Afghanistan were serving next
    to Turkish troops.

    "The French leadership is rediscovering Turkey's historic, economic,
    political and cultural place," he told the TDN after the
    panel. Referring to the meeting between the leaders of Turkey, France,
    Qatar and Syria in Damascus last month, Hanael said the pictures of
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan next to Sarkozy along with
    Syria's Bashar al-Assad and Qatar's Khalifa al-Thani made a big
    impression in France.

    He did admit though that it would be wrong to expect a change in
    Sarkozy's views on the Turkish EU bid. Hanael said, however, that the
    French presidency has not taken any step to obstruct membership
    negotiations.

    France currently holds the EU's rotating presidency until January.

    "We in the Senate rejected a measure that would have made a referendum
    on Turkey's membership in the EU mandatory. The vote was 297 to
    seven," he said, giving this as an example that France is not blocking
    Turkish membership.

    "Who can have the legitimacy of saying no to Turkey? Turkey has its
    place in the EU. To those skeptics of Turkey I ask: What will become
    of Turkey and the EU and the world in 10 years time?" he said at the
    seminar.

    When asked about the slow pace in the negotiation process, Hanael said
    Turkey has also slowed down its reform process. "I am not being
    judgmental. For understandable reasons, Turkey has not been able to
    continue the reform process," he said.
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