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French Bill On Armenian Deaths Worries Turkey

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  • French Bill On Armenian Deaths Worries Turkey

    FRENCH BILL ON ARMENIAN DEATHS WORRIES TURKEY
    By Martin Arnold in Paris and Vincent Boland in Ankara

    FT
    May 18 2006 03:00

    France's relations with Turkey will come under strain today if the
    parliament in Paris approves a bill that would make it a crime to
    deny the killing of Armenians by Ottoman troops in 1915 was genocide.

    Turkish academics have warned that if the opposition proposal becomes
    law, it would be "disastrous" for the democratic movement in Turkey.

    It could also cause economic disruption, with business leaders warning
    that French products could be boycotted in Turkey.

    Ankara recalled its ambassador to Paris briefly last week "for
    consultations" in protest at today's vote. It also pulled back its
    ambassador to Ottawa, following comments by the Canadian prime minister
    that appeared to express support for Armenia's view that the killings
    were genocide.

    The Armenian issue is particularly sensitive in France because of
    its 450,000-strong Armenian community.

    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 due to civil war and famine.

    Halil Berktay, one of the first Turkish historians to break the taboo
    on Armenia, said in yesterday's Le Monde that the effects of thenew
    French law would be "disastrous".

    He warned that Ankara could retaliate with a law criminalising
    recognition of the genocide. "There is a strong nationalist,
    anti-European wave in Turkey at the moment." he said.

    The French bill would punish denial of the genocide with one year in
    prison or a â~B¬45,000 fine, matching the penalty for denial of the
    Jewish Holocaust.

    --Boundary_(ID_9tXsPrq1HXyN27JPc3rkdg) --
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