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France's 'genocide' bill a 'booby trap' against Turkey's EU bid

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  • France's 'genocide' bill a 'booby trap' against Turkey's EU bid

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 13, 2006 Friday

    France's 'genocide' bill a 'booby trap' against Turkey's EU bid: press


    France has blackened its name as a country of freedom by voting a
    controversial bill Thursday on the World War I massacres of
    Armenians, Turkish newspapers said Friday, denouncing the draft as a
    bid to block Turkey's struggling bid to join the European Union.

    "Genocide of thought," the mass-circulation Hurriyet said on its
    front page, one day after the French National Assembly adopted a bill
    -- by 106 votes to 19 in the 577-seat house -- making it a jailable
    offence to deny that Armenians were the victims of genocide by
    Ottoman Turks betwen 1915-17.

    "106 stupid men," the popular daily Vatan blared, describing the
    lawmakers who voted for the bill as "Les Miserables", after French
    author Victor Hugo's classic novel.

    The mass-circulation Sabah ran, in French, the headline "J'accuse" --
    after the title of another French author's, Emile Zola's, landmark
    1898 article in favor of human rights -- and described the bill as
    "an unjustified decision that has hurt all Turks".

    "France has guillotined democracy," the popular Aksam newspaper said.

    Many commentators said the bill aimed to thwart Ankara's membership
    talks with the European Union, which began last year amid widespread
    scepticim on whether this mainly Muslim country has a place in
    Europe.

    "The bill aims to booby trap Turkey's path to EU membership rather
    than touch our sore spot concerning the allegations of Armenian
    genocide," a commentator in Sabah said.

    "Turkey's opponents... will now watch from the sidelines to see if we
    fall for the trap and, if we do, they will create pandemonium,
    arguing that Turkey has failed to adapt to European culture," he
    wrote.

    "Arrogant France does not want to become equals in the EU with the
    Turks it despises," wrote the popular Vatan. "It is trying with this
    unjust act to anger Turkey and make it feel insecure in order to sap
    its will and determination" to join the EU.

    A commentator in the liberal Radikal described the bill as a "blow
    below the belt" to discourage Turkey from EU membership, an
    alternative to coming up with concrete reasons to oppose Ankara's
    European aspirations.

    Milliyet, another liberal daily, said the bill could result in a drop
    of already waning public support in Turkey for EU membership.

    It said the EU too should oppose the bill, which it described as
    "indefensible anywhere in the world."

    "This (bill) is a legal freak that the EU should oppose as firmly as
    Ankara," it said. "The EU should remind France of the Copenhagen
    criteria," the bloc's basic tenets on human rights and freedoms.

    Turkey has threatened retaliatory measures for the bill, which must
    be approved by the French Senate and the president before it becomes
    law, including barring French companies from potentially lucrative
    projects.

    Civic groups have said they are considering calling for a public
    boycott of French goods.

    But many commentators argued that Ankara should think twice before
    going down that road and opt for legal action rather than economic
    sanctions, which could have a bruising effect on Turkey.

    "What we need to do is take steps that will deliver the biggest blow
    to France without inflaming the public," a commentator in Sabah said.
    "I hope we handle this well, because irrational xenophobia is the
    last thing a country financing a... 30 billion dollar current
    accounts deficit with foreign investment needs."
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