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ANKARA: Controversial Genocide Bill Fails In 1st Round

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  • ANKARA: Controversial Genocide Bill Fails In 1st Round

    CONTROVERSIAL GENOCIDE BILL FAILS IN 1ST ROUND

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 11 2006

    A French Parliament sub-commission yesterday rejected a controversial
    bill which aims to introduce imprisonment for questioning the Armenian
    genocide claims. But the bill is still going to be discussed at the
    general assembly next week.

    During yesterday's debates in the Law Commission, ruling Union for a
    Popular Movement (UMP) deputies harshly criticized the bill, drawn
    up by a group of socialist deputies. Alain Marsaud Lois and Michel
    Piron from the UMP are opposed to the bill and Piron stressed that
    trying to write history with laws would result in a discredited
    "official history."

    After the debates, the commission made no changes to the bill and
    rejected it by a majority.

    However, according to the legal procedures of the French Parliament,
    the bill is still going to be discussed at the general assembly next
    Thursday. The majority of ruling UMP deputies are opposed to the bill,
    but if they don't participate in next week's meeting, it's expected
    to be approved by the National Assembly. The UMP has announced that
    there will be no group decision on the issue.

    To become law, the bill also has to be passed also by the Parliament's
    upper chamber, the Senate. French sources say that if the Senate
    doesn't approve the draft in a year, it will become null and void as
    there elections next year.

    Ankara: Damaging relations in no one's interests

    The socialist deputies' "genocide bill" has created a row between
    France and Turkey, with Ankara recalling its ambassador to France
    for discussions to show its uneasiness over the situation.

    Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesperson Namik Tan said yesterday that
    the French government is acting sensitively on the issue, adding that
    the issue requires a process in which calm is maintained.

    "Turkey would like French deputies not to approve the bill," Tan said,
    "We believe that it's in no one's interests to cause uneasiness
    while we have great opportunities to further improve our deeply
    rooted relations."

    Turks and Armenians are at odds over the genocide claims. The Armenian
    diaspora claims that 1.5 million of their people were killed in Ottoman
    Turkey around the time of World War I, and refer to the events as a
    "genocide."

    Turkey, however, says there were mutual killings by Armenian and
    Muslim groups during civil unrest as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.
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