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  • What's good for Turkey is good for France

    National Post (Canada)
    November 3, 2006 Friday
    National Edition

    What's good for Turkey is good for France

    by Sumaira Shaikh, National Post


    Yesterday, it was announced that an emergency meeting between Turkey
    and the European Union had been canceled, dealing a fresh blow to
    Turkey's bid to join the EU. The problem in this case involved a
    disagreement over Turkey's relationship with Cyprus. But the setback
    highlights the more general hostility toward Turkey exhibited by many
    European nations. That hostility is rooted in the fact that Turkey's
    70 million people are mostly Muslim, while the EU is mostly
    Christian.

    The roots of this stubborn hostility were on display in October, when
    the lower house of France's legislature sought to criminalize denial
    of the 1915-1917 Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Turks, a bill that
    predictably caused an uproar in Turkey.

    Turkey holds that the deaths of the Armenians were not the result of
    an organized, premeditated slaughter. But French President Jacques
    Chirac said Turkey must recognize the Armenian deaths as genocide
    before it joins the EU. The campaign seems to be aimed at thwarting
    Turkey's membership in the EU for purely cynical reasons: If Turkey
    gains entry, it will become the second most populous EU nation, after
    Germany, with more power and leverage than France.

    The Turkish parliament responded in kind, with a plan to criminalize
    denial of the "Algerian genocide" by the French during 132 years of
    colonization in Algeria. There was also heated talk of breaking trade
    links with France. Turkey wisely abandoned these ideas: They only
    would have exacerbated the dispute.

    The French bill has had some benefit, though: It exposed European
    double standards.

    The reality is that both the Ottoman and French Empires did plenty of
    bad things. Even modern-day France, for all the lectures it gives the
    United States, is beset by racism and de-facto segregation of its
    Arab population, problems that rose to the surface during last year's
    suburban Paris riots. If Europe doesn't allow Turkey into the EU
    because of Ankara's attitude toward past human-rights abuses, then
    everyone else should be expelled from the EU club as well. The
    region's history was a violent one, and all nations have blood on
    their hands.

    France's government has its head deeper in the sand than most,
    however. Last year, the French passed a law that required high-school
    teachers to teach the "positive values" associated with colonialism,
    and to emphasize the positive role of the French presence abroad,
    especially in North Africa.

    This created an uproar in former French colonies, leading Abdelaziz
    Bouteflika, President of Algeria, to decline a planned friendship
    treaty with France. While the offending legislation was repealed
    earlier this year, the damage was done. In Canada, legislation like
    this would never have even seen the light of day.

    Among French politicians, the sense of history is highly selective.
    You cannot have a double standard about what is history and what is
    not.

    The time has now come for France and its European friends to stop
    bullying Turkey. They need to accept it into the EU without
    hypocritical pre-conditions. No one is innocent in Europe. Everyone
    has a part of history to be ashamed of, whether it is Turkey, Germany
    or France.

    We need to move on and be more constructive. The world is a bad
    enough place, with genocides taking place right under our noses in
    Darfur and elsewhere. We do little about them, perhaps because we are
    too busy fighting over genocides of the past.

    [email protected]

    - Sumaira Shaikh is a Toronto-based writer.
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