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ISTANBUL: France sending mixed signals in relations with Turkey

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  • ISTANBUL: France sending mixed signals in relations with Turkey

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 5 2013

    France sending mixed signals in relations with Turkey

    5 May 2013 /GÃ-ZDE NUR DONAT, ANKARA


    Relations between Turkey and France have not made the progress many
    expected over the past year, as negative signals continue to come from
    France with regards to its lax attitude towards the terrorist
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and its opposing stance to Turkey
    regarding the Armenian question.

    `Even though at the leadership level France is trying to improve
    relations with Turkey, there is a de facto enmity in French political
    circles in the senate. And one of the cards they play most frequently
    against Turkey is the Kurdish question. Their stance is not objective
    on that issue,' said a Turkish politician, who wanted to remain
    anonymous, to Sunday's Zaman.

    Turkish-French relations nosedived after deputies from then-President
    Nicolas Sarkozy's party tried to pass legislation criminalizing the
    denial of Armenian claims of genocide. Economic, political and
    military contacts between Turkey and France were at the point of being
    seriously damaged due to the legislation, but shortly afterwards it
    was deemed unconstitutional by France's top court and the crisis was
    seemingly averted.

    The Turkey-France Inter-parliamentary Friendship Group, abolished
    shortly after the French resolution, has recently been re-established
    and deputies have started to exchange visits.

    When first elected, incumbent President François Hollande gave signals
    that he would improve relations with Turkey, as he used a more
    moderate tone with regards to the so-called genocide issue, one of the
    main sources of tension between Turkey and France.

    But the position of the lower political circles in France does not
    point to easy relations with Turkey. The description of PKK members,
    deemed `terrorists' by the West, as `activists' in a report that was
    prepared for the Council of Europe (CoE) by Josette Durrieu, a deputy
    from the Socialist Party of France, of which Hollande was the former
    party leader, could be an example of such a position. The description
    has sparked reactions from Turkish officials.

    The description stands in sharp contrast to earlier reports,
    decisions, declarations and recommendations adopted by the Council of
    Europe's institutions, as the group is listed as a terrorist
    organization by the EU, the US and Turkey.

    In an earlier development, three Kurdish women with ties to the PKK
    were killed in January in Paris. The crime also shone the spotlight
    once more on France's lax attitude towards PKK terrorists.

    The alleged perpetrator of the crime has been arrested by the French
    police, but the political motives behind January's events have not yet
    come to light.

    Furthermore, France is said to have disappointed Turkey by failing to
    respond to Turkish calls to sign an agreement that aims to limit the
    financial sources of the terrorist PKK in its territory.

    Turkey has been working to convince France to sign an anti-money
    laundering and terror financing agreement since 2010, but the French
    have refused to sign the agreement offered by Turkey, according to
    Turkish officials who wanted to remain anonymous.

    Stating that developments such as the change in terminology coming
    from a French deputy with regards to the PKK would not be `pleasing'
    for relations between the two countries, Ã-zdem Sanberk, the head of
    Ankara-based International Strategic Research Organization (USAK) and
    a retired Turkish diplomat, claimed that Turkey and France would not
    very easily change the stances they had in past disputes.

    `Some disputes will be there to stay in Turkish-French relations. We
    are recovering after a long, unfriendly process in the past; we cannot
    walk into a rose garden,' Sanberk commented in a phone interview with
    Sunday's Zaman.

    While stating that the bilateral relations are showing signs of
    improving, he also said that France's own problems, such as the
    economic situation, the French military operation in Mali and the
    worsening public opinion of Hollande, prevent it from taking more
    courageous steps in improving relations with Turkey, a controversial
    subject in French politics.

    French stance on Armenian issue

    The remarks made by French Education Minister Vincent Peillon
    reaffirming Armenian allegations over the incidents of 1915 in the
    Ottoman Empire on April 24 -- the anniversary of the so-called
    Armenian genocide -- have also caused a reaction in Turkey. Peillon
    made his remarks during an event to commemorate the events of 1915 in
    Paris, during which he laid a wreath at the Komitas Monument -- a
    monument to the alleged genocide in France.

    "It is even more unfortunate that such remarks, which unfairly
    denigrate our history and foment hatred, were made by a government
    member responsible for education," read an official statement from the
    Turkish Foreign Ministry, issued following Peillon's remarks.

    However, the attendance of a French minister, and not of President
    Hollande, at the annual event in Paris has been seen as a goodwill
    gesture on the part of the French government to Turkey, but the usual
    dispute between Turkey and France could not be avoided.

    ÇaÄ?rı Erhan, a political science lecturer at Ankara University, stated
    that the French stance on the issue would continue to annoy Turkey as
    the 100th anniversary of 1915 events is approaching. `The Armenian
    lobbies are pushing for a new initiative for 2015, in France as well
    as in the US. We can expect a negative step on the issue from the
    French side,' Erhan noted.

    Significant progress in economic relations

    France is one of Turkey's biggest trading partners, as data from the
    Turkish Statistics Institute (TurkStat) show that Turkish exports to
    France in 2012 were worth $6.2 billion.

    Meanwhile, the country has an significant level of investment in
    Turkey, from the automotive to the food and service sectors.

    A French-Japanese consortium has recently won the tender to build
    Turkey's second nuclear energy plant. French utility group GDF Suez
    will operate the plant, joining Japan's Mitsubishi Heavy Industries,
    Ltd., which is leading the project.

    Furthermore, Turkish discount carrier Pegasus Airlines made a large
    jet order from Airbus, in which France has a major share, in December
    2012. This is an important development for France, at a time when it
    is trying to shake off the effects of a Europe-wide financial crisis
    along with other EU members.

    Cengiz Aktar, a Turkish journalist and academic who thinks Turkey and
    France are enjoying very good relations, especially in economy,
    compared to the past, criticized the French leadership for not making
    an official visit to Turkey for more than two decades.

    Stating that the last visit of a French president to Turkey was in
    1992 by then-President François Mitterand, Aktar said that `this is a
    desperate situation' for bilateral relations.

    The future will show whether Turkey is able to use these close
    economic ties with France as political leverage with the country.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/news-314518-france-sending-mixed-signals-in-relations-with-turkey.html

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