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French genocide bill angers Turks

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  • French genocide bill angers Turks

    The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
    October 13, 2006 Friday
    Early Edition

    French genocide bill angers Turks

    by: David Rennie, The Telegraph


    The French parliament has triggered a new crisis in Turkey's
    relations with Europe by approving a bill that would make it a crime
    to deny that Armenians suffered a genocide at the hands of Ottoman
    Turks.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry said Thursday's vote in the French
    national assembly had dealt "a heavy blow" to bilateral relations.

    Turkey denies that massacres of Armenians between 1915 and 1923
    amounted to genocide, saying large numbers of Turks and Armenians
    died in civil war.

    Ali Babacan, Turkey's economics minister, said it was too soon to
    know whether the Turkish public would heed calls from nationalist
    groups to boycott French goods.

    "As the government, we are not encouraging that, but this is the
    people's decision," he said.

    The Socialist-backed law was widely criticized in Turkey as another
    attempt by European politicians to place obstacles in the path of
    Ankara's painful progress toward membership in the European Union.
    Polls have shown that 60 per cent of the French public is opposed to
    Turkish entry into the EU.

    France would impose a one-year prison term and a fine of more than
    $200,000 Cdn for anyone denying the Armenian genocide, following the
    lead of an earlier law on denying the Nazi Holocaust.

    The vote came months ahead of French presidential and parliamentary
    elections, in which the 400,000-member Armenian community in France
    will form a formidable voter bloc.

    The bill doesn't have government support and seems likely to fall in
    the Senate.

    Both President Jacques Chirac, and Segolene Royal, the Socialist
    presidential front-runner, say that Turkey must acknowledge the
    genocide of the Armenians before joining the EU. Nicolas Sarkozy, the
    conservative front-runner, is opposed to Turkey's EU entry under any
    conditions.

    Meanwhile, the Turkish parliament scrapped plans for a tit-for-tat
    law that would have made it illegal to deny that French colonialists
    committed genocide against the Algerians in their war for
    independence.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told MPs: "You don't clean up
    dirt with more dirt."

    He repeated calls to Armenia jointly to research the killings by
    opening the historical archives of both countries to historians.
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