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ANKARA: Turkish Parliament Criticizes France

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Parliament Criticizes France

    TURKISH PARLIAMENT CRITICIZES FRANCE

    Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 18 2006

    The Turkish parliament issued an indirect condemnation of the French
    parliament's acceptance of a bill criminalizing the denial of the
    so-called Armenian genocide Tuesday. The common declaration of
    the parliament emphasized that acceptance of the bill would cause
    irreversible damages to political, economic and military relations
    between Turkey and France.

    The declaration called France to retreat from its "historical mistake,"
    stating that the bill harmed Turkey's struggle to normalize its
    relations with Armenia. The declaration also said that France caused
    more than one million deaths in its own past, primarily in Algeria,
    and read, "The burden of policies harming Turkey and Turkish people
    will be very large."

    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said Turkey might apply to
    international courts in opposition to the bill that French parliament
    accepted.

    Gul informed the deputies during a special parliamentary session
    that as the government they did their best to prevent the bill
    from being accepted, adding: "We have another alternative and our
    government will not abstain from applying this method. We will use
    all of the means that international law allows, including applying
    to an international court."

    Gul emphasized that Turkey was never intolerant to other nations
    throughout its long history and added France was trying to provoke
    Armenia and the Armenian people just as it did during World War I.

    Gul said Turkish culture was based on tolerance, and added: "If
    our ancestors had applied assimilation toward the other nations in
    the past, behaving in the same way that some countries, which are
    giving us 'civilization' lessons at the moment, behaved previously,
    many religions, languages and religion sects would not have survived
    to the present day."

    Gul said if the bill became operant in France, despite all their
    warnings, it would be a great shame for France and irreversibly harm
    political, economic and military relations between the two countries.

    After the special meeting, the parliament accepted the declaration
    prepared commonly by the members of all parties in the parliament.

    The declaration read the genocide bill was accepted with the votes
    of only one out of five French MPs, and many deputies could not
    use their votes as they were against the acceptance of the bill and
    further emphasized the bill was accepted under strong influence of
    the Armenian minority in France.

    The declaration also emphasized that although French politicians
    thought it was the job of historians to discuss past events when their
    own history was concerned, interestingly enough, they thought it was
    the right of politicians to decide in Turkey's case.

    The declaration emphasized that in the history of Turkey, no shameful
    events have occurred, and as such the Turkish people had nothing to
    hide from.

    The Turkish parliament declaration also named many distinguished
    international historians, including French ones, who did not
    describe the events of 1915 as a "massacre," contrary to the claims
    of Armenians.
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