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Turkish-French Ties Face 'Irreparable Damage' Over Genocide Bill: FM

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  • Turkish-French Ties Face 'Irreparable Damage' Over Genocide Bill: FM

    TURKISH-FRENCH TIES FACE 'IRREPARABLE DAMAGE' OVER GENOCIDE BILL: FM

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 17, 2006 Tuesday

    A French bill making it a crime to deny Ottoman Turks committed
    genocide against Armenians will inflict "irreparable damage" to
    bilateral ties if adopted, the Turkish foreign minister warned Tuesday.

    Speaking during a parliamentary debate on the future of Turkish-French
    ties, Abdullah Gul said Ankara was considering international legal
    means to combat the bill.

    "The bill has caused great wounds in Turkish-French ties," Gul told
    parliament.

    If it is adopted, "the wounds it has opened will be irreparable. Our
    ties will receive irreparable wounds in politics, economics and
    security," he said.

    The bill, which was voted by the lower house of the French parliament
    Thursday, foresees one year in jail and a fine of 45,000 euros (57,000
    dollars) for anyone who denies that World War I massacres of Armenians
    were genocide.

    It needs the approval of the Senate and the president to become law.

    Gul said Ankara was studying a detailed plan of retaliatory measures
    against the bill, which he said violated freedom of expression,
    a basic tenet of the European Union.

    "The government will use all means provided by international law,
    including resorting to judiciary means," Gul said.

    Analysts have said Turkey could challenge the French bill at the
    European Court of Human Rights after it has been adopted.

    The bill is widely seen here as a punch below the belt by opponents
    of Turkey's European Union membership that will fan anti-Western
    sentiment among Turks and make it harder for the government to push
    ahead with painful EU-demanded reforms.

    "France has made a definite decision to block Turkey's full membershup
    in the Europeaun Union," said Sukru Elekdag, a senior MP from the
    main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP). "France's aim is to
    frustrate Turkey, to force it to throw in the towel."

    Ankara, facing mounting EU warnings to respect freedom of speech,
    charges that the French move is an example of double standards,
    arguing that the bill eventually could block free debate on a
    historical subject.

    Opposition lawmakers called also for reprisals against neighboring
    Armenia which is waging an international campaign to have the killings
    recognised as genocide.

    "If they hurt us, then we should hurt them too," Onur Oymen, also
    from the CHP, said, suggesting that about 70,000 illegal Armenian
    workers in Turkey, who have so far been tolerated, be sent back.

    Critics of the French bill say it will deal a blow to tentative
    efforts for reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia.

    Ankara has declined to establish diplomatic ties with Yerevan. In
    1993, it sealed its border with its eastern neighbor, a move which
    was also a gesture of solidarity with close ally Azerbaijan, which
    was then at war with Armenia.

    Ankara had warned ahead of the vote that French companies would be
    barred from major economic projects in Turkey, including a nuclear
    power plant whose tender process is expected to soon begin, if the
    bill was adopted.

    Officials, however, have sought to calm widespread calls for a boycott
    of French goods on the grounds that French companies based in Turkey
    and employing Turks could be harmed.

    The killings are one of the most controversial episodes in Turkish
    history.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

    Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label, arguing that
    300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife
    when Armenians rose for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart.
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