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ANKARA: Turkey Pressures France To Prevent Pro-Genocide Bill

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Pressures France To Prevent Pro-Genocide Bill

    TURKEY PRESSURES FRANCE TO PREVENT PRO-GENOCIDE BILL
    By Salih Boztas, Ali Ihsan Aydin, Ankara, Paris

    Zaman, Turkey
    May 10 1006

    Turkey is acting to prevent France's legislative proposal to penalize
    those who deny the so-called Armenian genocide.

    The Turkish administration briefly recalled its Ambassador to France
    this week, Osman Koruturk, who returned to Ankara to offer an official
    analysis through diplomatic channels. A group of Turkish deputies
    traveled to France to persuade their French counterparts.

    Foreign Ministry sources say Koruturk was called to Ankara to discuss
    issue, and he will head back to Paris by the weekend.

    Turkey is exerting efforts in diplomatic, political and economic
    channels against the bill in question.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, meeting with business leaders
    partnered with French companies yesterday, asked for their support
    to obstruct the submission of the motion to the French Parliament on
    May 18.

    Business executives representing French economic interests in Turkey
    said they sent a letter to French President Jacques Chirac and will
    do all they can to stop the motion.

    Ankara does not expect rocky relations with Paris at this point. No
    extreme measures, such as officially withdrawing the Turkish
    ambassador, will be resorted to at this stage. However, Turkey will
    convey the message that it believes in the "liberalistic environment
    of France."

    The motion, proposed by the main opposition Socialist Party in France,
    will be discussed today at the French parliamentary Regulations
    Commission. Even if the motion passes on May 18, a long process is
    required to render it law.

    The legislative proposal brings a fine of 45,000 Euros and a prison
    sentence to those who deny the so-called Armenian genocide. Trade
    unions, labor unions and non-governmental organizations in Turkey
    issued a full-page notice in French newspapers asking for the motion's
    withdrawal.

    As part of the concerted efforts, the Turkish Parliament Foreign
    Affairs Commission went to Paris Tuesday before discussions for the
    motion begin.

    Turkish Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Commission Chairman Mehmet
    Dulger from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), and
    deputies Musa Sivacioglu, Onur Oymen and Gulsun Bilgehan Toker will
    meet with representatives of political parties present at the French
    Parliament and ask for the motion to be withdrawn.

    The Turkish deputies are expected to warn the French politician
    that the motions' becoming law may lead to irreparable damages in
    bilateral relations.

    Erdogan: 10 days of hard work await

    In the frame of economic efforts, Ankara pointed out Turkey is
    an important export point for France and asked for the support of
    business circles.

    The Prime Minister had a 45-minute meeting with the executives of
    French companies operating in Turkey. "This is unfair," said Erdogan,
    "This is the job of historians, we expect support from your business
    partners in France; we want them to lobby."

    Twenty-two of 28 companies joined the meeting. TEB-BNP CEO Yavuz
    Canevi, one of the participants, said: "We all agree with the Prime
    Minister. We have not reached decisions like an embargo yet," and
    Omnium Plastic Industry Chairman Bulent Akman warned, "There will be
    much reaction if the motion passes. It will cause trouble both for
    the French and us."
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