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  • ANKARA: French Company Trading with Turkey Warns France Against Bill

    Zaman Online, Turkey
    May 14 2006

    French Company Trading with Turkey Warns France Against Genocide Bill


    By Erkan Acar, Marseilles
    Published: Sunday, May 14, 2006
    zaman.com


    Tension between Turkey and France is mounting over a bill to
    criminalize denial of the Armenian genocide due for discussion in the
    French Parliament on March 18.

    French companies with commercial ties with Turkey are most concerned
    over the escalation tensions between the two countries.

    French companies are expending every effort to persuade French
    parliamentarians to vote against the bill that they fear will cause
    them to suffer immeasurable commercial losses from future embargoes
    imposed by Turkey, as the bill is chiefly designed to win Armenian
    votes.

    The De Villepin administration received a strong warning over the
    Armenian bill from Eurocopter, one of the world's largest helicopter
    manufacturers with French partners, as the company fears losing a
    contract to supply attack helicopters to the Turkish military late
    this summer.

    Fabrice Breiger, chief executive of Eurocopter, pointed to the
    temporary nature of the crises that will eventually be overcome by
    ties of friendship between the two countries:


    `I am not a politician; I am the manager of an international company.
    But that does not necessarily mean that I am not familiar with news
    articles; it also does not imply that company managers cannot form
    ideas about what is going on outside. As European industrialists, we
    conveyed the necessary messages to European countries.'


    Turkey had planned to buy attack and exploration helicopters for its
    fight against terrorism, as part of the ATAK Project launched in
    1996.

    The Project, expected to cost $1.5 billion, was delayed for five
    years and the previous tender was cancelled during a Defense Industry
    Executive Commission meeting in May 2004.

    After the cancellation of the tender, studies began in search of a
    new model that aimed at meeting the military's needs in a shorter
    time and make more cost effective use of Turkey's domestic capacity.

    For this purpose, a new tender invitation was released on 10 February
    2005.

    Several defense companies applied to participate in the tender that
    closed in December 2005.

    Those companies include: Eurocopter with the Tiger helicopter, the
    Italian Agusta company with the A-129 Mangusta, Russia's
    Rosoboronexport with the MI-28 Havoc, and the South African Denel
    Company with the CSH-2 Rooivalk helicopter.
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