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ANKARA: Turkish NGOs Protest French Move To Debate Armenian Bill

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  • ANKARA: Turkish NGOs Protest French Move To Debate Armenian Bill

    TURKISH NGOS PROTEST FRENCH MOVE TO DEBATE ARMENIAN BILL

    The News Anatolian, Turkey
    May 17 2006

    Various non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and representatives of
    labor unions in Ankara yesterday protested a bill set to be voted on
    Thursday by the French Parliament which introduces prison terms for
    those questioning the Armenian genocide claims.

    The protestors demonstrated in front of the French Embassy calling on
    the French Parliament not to pass the Armenian bill. Paris Caddesi,
    where the embassy is also located, was closed to traffic for half
    an hour.

    The demonstrators chanted slogans against supporters of the bill and
    waved Turkish flags. The protest was held amid tight security and
    ended peacefully when the street was reopened to traffic.

    In related news, the Association of Young Leaders yesterday condemned
    the debates that will take place in the French Parliament on Thursday
    by issuing a written statement.

    The association expressed its disappointment over the submission of a
    bill that limits freedom of thought and expression to the Parliament
    of a country like France, known for its open attitude towards
    freedoms. "We hope the French Parliament won't take a decision that
    will deeply harm the historic relations between Turkey and France
    for the sake of winning a few thousand Armenian supporters in the
    next elections," it read.

    Underlining that parliaments making rulings on claims that have not
    been recognized as a crime by national or international courts is
    unjust, the young leaders also stressed that writing history is not
    the business of parliaments.

    "If we're forced to follow that logic then the Turkish Parliament
    should also enact laws that introduce punishments for those who
    deny the French genocides claimed to have been committed in Algeria,
    Rwanda and Hatay," the statement added.

    Although French President Jacques Chirac last Friday gave Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan assurances that France will
    take Turkish concerns into consideration during the debate on the
    bill, French socialists last Thursday expressed their insistence on
    bringing the bill to the Parliament's floor despite Parliament's Law
    Commission having rejected the controversial bill. At debates last
    Wednesday in the Law Commission, ruling Union for Popular Movement
    (UMP) deputies sharply criticized the bill, drawn up by a group of
    socialist deputies. Alain Marsaud 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, under French Parliament's bylaws, the bill is still going
    to be debated by the General Assembly this Thursday. The majority
    of ruling UMP deputies are opposed to the bill, but if they don't
    participate in this 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.
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