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Links With Armenia Reinforce French Fears: Turkey's Alleged Genocide

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  • Links With Armenia Reinforce French Fears: Turkey's Alleged Genocide

    LINKS WITH ARMENIA REINFORCE FRENCH FEARS: TURKEY'S ALLEGED GENOCIDE IS SEEN IN FRANCE AS A BARRIER TO EU ENTRY
    By John Thornhill

    Financial Times (London, England)
    October 1, 2005 Saturday
    London Edition 1

    Every year France celebrates another country by organising bilateral
    visits and cultural exchanges. In 2004it was China, and the Eiffel
    Tower was briefly lit up in red. This year it has been Brazil -
    hence the samba dancers at Paris plage.

    Next year it will be Armenia. The choice of a small Caucasian country
    of 3m people highlights the importance France attaches to Armenia.

    This is mostly due to France's 450,000-strong Armenian community,
    which has grown increasingly rich and influential.

    But the timing of Armenia Year could hardly be more discordant for
    President Jacques Chirac if, as expected on Monday, France and the
    European Union's other 24 members signal the start of accession talks
    with Turkey.

    Armenians in France and elsewhere have been opposing Turkey's entry
    into the EU - unless and until Ankara acknowledges that the death
    of Armenians during the break-up of the Ottoman empire was an act of
    genocide. Armenians claim up to 1.5m people died in 1915-18. Turkey
    denies genocide, and admits only that hundreds of thousands of both
    Armenians and Turks died, largely as a result of civil war and famine.

    The French parliament has already declared the massacres to have
    been a genocide. And Mr Chirac has himself been sympathetic to the
    Armenian cause.

    Harout Mardirossian, president of the Paris-based Committee for the
    Defence of the Armenian Cause, says Turkey has been a "a country in
    denial" for 80 years that does not conform with the values espoused
    by the EU.

    "How can you imagine Germany being integrated into the European Union
    in the 1960s if it did not recognise the Holocaust?" he says.

    In spite of Mr Chirac's support for accession talks with Turkey,
    most of his compatriots are against the move. A recent Eurobarometer
    poll showed that 70 per cent of French respondents opposed Turkey's
    entry into the EU with only 21 per cent in favour. Opposition to
    Turkish entry boosted the victorious No vote during May's referendum
    on Europe's constitution.

    Those opposed to Turkey's accession range from Islamophobic
    nationalists to Armenian campaigners to fervent pro-Europeans who
    believe the entry of such a large country would kill off the dreams
    of a federal EU.

    Earlier this month, Valery Giscard d'Estaing, the former French
    president and father of the European constitution, said French voters
    had clearly expressed their opposition to Turkey's entry.

    He noted: "There was a clear contradiction between the pursuit of
    European political integration and the entry of Turkey into European
    institutions. These two projects are incompatible."

    Mr Chirac has argued that Turkey's entry into the EU would recognise
    a great civilisation, extend Europe's hand to the Muslim world, and
    help energise the EU's economy. But he has also guaranteed French
    voters a referendum on whether to accept Turkey's entry into the EU
    once accession talks are completed.

    However, Sylvie Goulard, a Europe expert at Sciences-Po university,
    says this move deceives the French and Turks. "Resistance to Turkey's
    accession is not going to disappear in 15 years. Even if the Turks
    have successfully reformed themselves, they will still share a border
    with Iran and Iraq. You cannot change the nature of the EU without
    a proper democratic debate."

    Whatever the EU leaders decide, the issue of Turkey will loom large
    through the 2007 presidential elections and beyond. Nicolas Sarkozy,
    president of the ruling UMP party and a strong presidential contender,
    has already stated his firm opposition to Turkey's accession. Dominique
    de Villepin, the prime minister and rival presidential contender,
    has doggedly defended Mr Chirac's line.
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