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France: Turkey Must Recognize Armenian Atrocities Before Joining EU

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  • France: Turkey Must Recognize Armenian Atrocities Before Joining EU

    RFE/RL EU: France Says Turkey Must Recognize Armenian Atrocities Before
    Joining EU
    Tuesday, 14 December 2004

    Three days before a key European Union summit that is likely to give
    Turkey a date for starting formal entry talks, French Foreign Minister
    Michel Barnier has said that Ankara must reassess its past. Barnier said
    yesterday that Turkey must come to terms with the mass killing of
    Armenians in the late years of the Ottoman Empire before it can enter
    the EU. The remarks have already provoked reactions in Turkey. Ankara
    has long denied charges that Turks committed genocide against Armenians.

    By Jean-Christophe Peuch

    Prague, 14 December 2004 (RFE/RL) -- The comments by French Foreign
    Minister Michel Barnier came after talks in Brussels with his
    counterparts from the 24 other European Union countries.

    Barnier told reporters that France wants Ankara to reconsider its
    position on the mass killings of Ottoman Armenians at the start of the
    last century before it joins the EU.

    "Regarding Armenia, I mentioned the request that France will make during
    the negotiations [with Turkey] for a recognition of the tragedy that
    took place at the beginning of the [last] century and that concerned
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians," Barnier said.

    It was the first time a French government official publicly established
    a link between the Armenian atrocities and Turkey's EU aspirations.

    Barnier said France would file an official request with the Turkish
    government after the EU gives Ankara a date for the start of formal
    entry talks.

    Ankara's membership bid will be reviewed at the EU's winter summit on 16
    and 17 December in Brussels. The bloc has already made it clear that it
    will give positive answers.
    According to most Western estimates, massacres and deportations between
    1915 and 1923 claimed up to 1.5 million Armenian lives. Another 200,000
    Armenians reportedly were killed between 1894 and 1896.

    Most Western and Armenian scholars blame the nationalist Young Turk
    leaders that ruled over the Ottoman Empire during World War I for a
    deliberate policy of extermination.

    Although the successive governments that came to power after the
    creation of the Turkish Republic in 1923 deny any links with their
    Ottoman predecessors, they have always refused to recognize the killings
    of Armenians as genocide.

    Ankara insists the 1.5-million death toll is inflated and says that, if
    300,000 Armenians did die during those years, this was largely the
    result of civil unrest that also claimed the lives of thousands of Turks.

    Citing historical evidence, Western and Armenian scholars in turn say
    the Young Turks sought to systematically deport and massacre the
    empire's Armenian population, partly in retaliation for its suspected
    collaboration with Russia.

    Since 1923, Turkey has resisted and condemned any attempt by foreign
    parliaments or governments to raise the Armenian genocide issue.

    In June 2001, the French parliament passed a cautiously worded bill that
    recognized the 1915-1923 killings of Ottoman Armenians as genocide.

    Although the French government opposed the initiative, President Jacques
    Chirac signed the bill into law. This prompted a swift reaction from
    Ankara, which threatened to sever economic and cultural ties with Paris.

    Turkey's anger eventually abated after a few weeks and bilateral
    relations went back to normal.

    Up until a parliamentary debate today, Barnier was careful to not
    describe the 1915-1923 killings as "genocide." Still, a Turkish Foreign
    Ministry spokesman immediately reacted to his initial comments, saying
    his country would "never recognize any so-called genocide."

    Armenia, which has put recognition of the genocide worldwide on its
    foreign policy agenda, welcomed France's position.

    Speaking to reporters in Yerevan today, Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
    said that Barnier's remarks in Brussels "show once again that the
    question of the genocide has gone beyond the Armenian framework and is
    now a global issue."

    In an interview with Reuters last week, Oskanian said he hoped Turkey
    would change its stance on the genocide after it enters into talks with
    the EU.

    Regional experts say Ankara's attitude toward the Armenian issue is
    deeply rooted in Turkeys' educational system, which glosses over the
    country's cultural diversity in a bid to promote a unifying Turkish
    national identity.

    However, Barnier said that in France's view, Ankara cannot aspire to EU
    membership if it refuses to come in terms with its past.

    "If, as I think, the core idea of Europe's project is that all its
    members should reconcile one with another -- like France and Germany,
    which have put reconciliation at the center of their project -- and that
    each member state should reconcile with its own past, then I believe
    that when the time comes Turkey, too, will have to come in terms with
    its own past and history and recognize this tragedy," Barnier said.

    In comments on France 2 public television today, the foreign minister
    reiterated that Paris is not making this a condition for the opening of
    entry talks with the EU. Barnier said that would not be legally possible.

    "This is an issue that we will raise during the negotiation process. We
    will have about 10 years to do so and the Turks will have about 10 years
    to ponder their answer. It is not a condition we're making for the
    opening of negotiations that will be discussed by EU leaders this coming
    Thursday and Friday," Barnier said.

    Results of an opinion survey released today by the Paris-based French
    Institute of Public Opinion (IFOP) show a majority of citizens in France
    and Germany remain opposed to Turkey's entry into the EU.

    Those who object to Ankara's accession cite its human rights record, its
    cultural and religious differences with European countries, and the
    status of women in Turkish society.

    However, they make no mention of the Armenian issue.


    PHOTO CAPTION: "This is an issue that we will raise during the
    negotiation process. We will have about 10 years to do so and the Turks
    will have about 10 years to ponder their answer." -- French Foreign
    Minister Michel Barnier

    http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2004/12/32cd76e7-83e5-4510-b2bb-53d041d63ca8.html
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