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Turks publish appeal against French Armenia bill

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  • Turks publish appeal against French Armenia bill

    Turks publish appeal against French Armenia bill

    Agence France Presse -- English
    May 5, 2006 Friday 2:34 PM GMT

    PARIS, May 5 2006 -- Several Turkish organisations published an open
    letter in French newspapers Friday calling on the National Assembly
    not to back a bill that would make it a punishable offence to deny
    "the existence of the 1915 Armenian genocide."

    Proposed by members of the opposition Socialist Party (PS), the bill
    has a first reading before the parliament on May 18.

    If approved, it would authorise a maximum five years in prison and a
    fine of 45,000 euros (57,000 dollars) for any person who denied that
    the massacres of Armenians in World War I were a genocide.

    The same punishment is on the statute books for people who deny that
    the Jewish holocaust took place.

    "If it were to be adopted, such a law would forbid any ulterior debate
    among historians wanting to shed light on the responsibilities of
    the parties to these tragic events," the Turkish organisations --
    including unions and business groups -- said in their letter.

    The bill follows on from a 2001 French law which officially recognised
    the massacres as genocide.

    According to the new bill's sponsor PS deputy Didier Migaud, the
    original law was insufficient because it did not include any way of
    punishing negationists.

    The 2001 law, which infuriated Turkey, was passed when the PS had a
    majority in the National Assembly. The new bill could only pass with
    support from the government, which seems highly unlikely.

    There has been much critical discussion recently in France about
    so-called "historical" laws which seek to authorise an official
    version of past events.

    In January President Jacques Chirac asked for a controversial law
    recognising the "positive role" of colonialism to be struck off the
    statute books.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 by Turks, as the Ottoman
    Empire, modern Turkey's predecessor, was falling apart.

    Turkey categorically rejects the claims, saying 300,000 Armenians and
    at least as many Turks died in civil strife when the Armenians took
    up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
    troops invading Ottoman soil.
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