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France raises Armenia issue ahead of EU decision on Turkey

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  • France raises Armenia issue ahead of EU decision on Turkey

    France raises Armenia issue ahead of EU decision on Turkey

    EUbusiness
    14/12/2004

    Days ahead of a crucial EU decision on Turkish accession talks, Paris
    has raised the highly sensitive issue of the Armenian "tragedy" -- an
    indication of the sharp divisions of opinion in France over Ankara's
    membership bid.

    At a summit in Brussels this week heads of government from the 25
    member states are to give a green light for the opening of membership
    negotiations, probably some time next year, while at the same time
    warning the process could take more than a decade.

    On Monday French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier risked angering
    Ankara when he unexpectedly announced France would ask it to
    "recognise the Armenian tragedy of the start of the (last) century
    ... Turkey must carry out this task as a memorial."

    Asked Tuesday whether this amounted to a pre-condition for opening
    talks on EU membership, Barnier this was legally not possible, but he
    said it was "a question that we will raise in the course of
    negotiations, and we have around 10 years to raise it."

    An estimated 1.5 million Armenians are believed to have died between
    1915 and 1917 in the last years of the Ottoman empire, an episode
    referred to by Armenians as their "genocide". But the government in
    Ankara disputes the scale and nature of the killing.

    In France, which has a large Armenian community, the "genocide" has
    become a highly politicised subject. In 2001 the then
    Socialist-dominated National Assembly voted to recognise that
    "genocide" had occurred -- prompting Turkey to recall its ambassador.

    Barnier's decision to raise the Armenia issue was being interpreted
    Tuesday as a bid to reassure a French public that remains by a clear
    majority hostile to Ankara's application to join the European Union.

    While President Jacques Chirac has publicly stated his support for
    Turkey's eventual membership, he is opposed by a majority of his own
    Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) as well as many in the opposition
    Socialists. A recent poll showed that 56 percent of the public is
    against Turkish membership, compared to only 38 percent in favour.

    Promising to ensure that the Armenian "tragedy" is tabled during entry
    negotiations is a way of signalling to the French public that the
    government has not forgotten their concerns, commentators said.

    Chirac is known to be worried that the prospect of Turkish admission
    could sour French attitudes to the EU just ahead of a promised
    referendum next year on the union's proposed constitution, possibly
    even leading to its rejection.

    To reassure voters, the president has already undertaken to change the
    country's constitution so that all future applications to the EU --
    including Turkey's -- would have to be approved by a national
    referendum in France.

    He and Barnier have also said that talks with Turkey may result in a
    "privileged partnership" rather than full-scale membership -- though
    they insists this is France's desired objective.
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