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Turkish Group Boycotts Some French Goods

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  • Turkish Group Boycotts Some French Goods

    Associated Press
    Oct 13 2006

    Turkish Group Boycotts Some French Goods


    ISTANBUL, Turkey - The Turkish Consumers Union announced a limited
    boycott of French goods Friday in reaction to a French law that would
    make it a crime to deny that mass killings of Armenians in Turkey was
    genocide.

    The non-governmental group, which seeks to educate and advocate for
    Turkish consumers, said the boycott would begin with the French oil
    products company Total, and that the union would publicize a new
    French company for Turks to boycott each week.

    "From today on, every week we are going to boycott a French brand,
    and show our reaction in a language that France can understand,"
    group chairman Bulent Deniz said.

    "By adopting the bill on making denial of the so-called Armenian
    genocide a crime, the French National Assembly expressed its
    opposition to freedom of thought."

    He said the boycott would continue until the law was defeated or
    annulled.

    Total trade between the two countries last year stood at nearly $10
    billion. Turkey imported goods from France worth nearly $6 billion.

    On Thursday, French lawmakers _ in a 106-19 vote _ approved a bill
    that would criminalize denying the mass killings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I amounted to genocide,
    but the bill still needs to be approved by the French Senate and the
    president to become law.

    Turks were outraged by the decision, which was widely viewed as a
    hostile measure. The European Union on Friday said the bill was
    "counterproductive."

    Turkey acknowledges that great numbers of Armenians were killed in
    fighting and mass expulsions, but does not accept the label of
    genocide.

    In Istanbul, customers at some retail centers were being urged by
    salespeople not to purchase French goods as a reaction to the French
    lawmakers' vote.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had called on Turks Thursday to
    be moderate in their response, and the Foreign Ministry said it would
    do everything it could to ensure the law was not passed.

    On Friday, a Turkish parliamentary commission charged with EU
    harmonization called on France to reject or retract the law. "Our
    commission condemns this unjust decision and hopes that France will
    succumb to common sense and turn back from this mistake," the
    statement said.
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