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Turkey To Restore Ties With France After Genocide Row

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  • Turkey To Restore Ties With France After Genocide Row

    TURKEY TO RESTORE TIES WITH FRANCE AFTER GENOCIDE ROW

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/06/21/turkey-to-restore-ties-with-france-after-genocide-row/
    June 21, 2012

    ANKARA (Reuters)-Turkey has agreed to restore all ties with France,
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Thursday, June 21, following
    a breakdown in relations last year prompted by a simmering dispute
    over the 1915 mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

    Davutoglu Ankara cancelled all economic, political and military
    meetings with Paris in December after France's lower house of
    parliament voted overwhelmingly in favour of a draft law to make it
    illegal to deny that the killings amounted to genocide.

    France's highest court overturned the law two months later but the
    Turkish measures taken against France, which included restrictions on
    French military aircraft and ships landing or docking on its territory,
    have remained in place.

    Speaking live on Turkish television, Davutoglu said Turkey's Prime
    Minister Tayyip Erdogan had ordered the sanctions be lifted after a
    positive meeting with France's new President Francois Hollande at a
    world summit in Brazil.

    "The prime minister gave the necessary instructions after meeting
    with Hollande. Because of this new attitude from France, these
    sanctions will be dropped," Davutoglu said during an interview with
    news broadcaster CNN Turk.

    Davutoglu said he would travel to Paris on July 5 for bilateral
    meetings where they would discuss taking additional "positive steps"
    in the future.

    Relations between the countries became strained under former French
    President Nicolas Sarkozy and his election defeat earlier this year
    was viewed in Ankara as a chance to start a new phase.

    Muslim Turkey accused Sarkozy, whose UMP party put forward the bill,
    of trying to win the votes of 500,000 ethnic Armenians in the two-round
    presidential vote on April 22 and May 6.

    Sarkozy had also been one of the most vocal opponents of Turkish
    European Union membership.

    Armenia, backed by many historians and parliaments, says about 1.5
    million Christian Armenians were killed in what is now eastern Turkey
    during World War One in a deliberate policy of genocide ordered by
    the Ottoman government.

    Turkey says there was a heavy loss of life on both sides during the
    fighting in which Armenian partisans supported invading Russian forces.

    The Ottoman Empire collapsed after the end of the war, but successive
    Turkish governments and the vast majority of Turks feel the charge
    of genocide is a direct insult to their nation.

    (Reporting by Tulay Karadeniz; Writing by Jonathon Burch; Editing by
    Catherine Evans)

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