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  • Turkey protest: France's Armenian genocide denial bill leads to...

    AsiaNews.it, Italy
    Oct 13 2006

    Turkey protest: France's Armenian genocide denial bill leads to calls
    for boycott

    Turkish government calls action `severe blow' against relations built
    over the centuries; Turkish press calls French MPs `stupid'.


    Ankara (AsiaNews) - Reactions in the Turkish press to the French
    parliamentary vote making it a crime to deny that Armenians suffered
    genocide are perhaps stronger than expected. The Turkish government,
    despite the popular reaction, responded yesterday with more a
    moderate tone, excluding official retaliation.

    `Thought Genocide' titled popular daily Hurryet in a clear reference
    to the new law's denial of free speech. The paper also gave wide
    coverage to political reactions, starting with that of Bulent Arinc,
    the speaker of the Turkish parliament, who said that it `is a
    decision which will cause great embarrassment. It is a stance against
    the Turkish people, and we cannot accept this.'

    `106 stupid men' titled another paper, Vatan, referring to the number
    of French MPs who voted in favour of the bill. For Milliyet `the
    Turkish press is mad at France, whilst Sabah lobbed a meaningful
    `J'accuse' saying that the `French parliament, acting as judge and
    jury, took a decision that hurts all Turks'. Finally, Cumhuriyet
    reiterated a call to `Boycott' made by Dervis Gunday, chairman of the
    Turkish Traders and Small Businessmen's Confederation (TESK), French
    products.

    In the heat of the situation, Turkish Economy Minister Ali Babacan
    also hinted at a possible anti-French boycott saying that `it depends
    on the people'. But the Turkish government's official position was
    expressed yesterday by the foreign ministry in Ankara. In a press
    release it said: `The long-standing historical relations between
    Turkey and France, which have grown through the centuries with great
    care, have received a severe blow today because of the irresponsible
    attempts - based on groundless claims - of a group of French politicians
    who are unable to appreciate the consequences of the policies they
    follow.'

    If the government is concerned about possible repercussions of the
    French decision on Turkey's application to join the European Union,
    the nationalist response in the country to the French bill might also
    cause problems to those Turkish intellectuals like Nobel Prize
    laureate for literature Orhan Pamuk who have tried to push their
    countrymen to face head on the Armenian extermination issue and were
    taken to court for it.
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