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ANKARA: A second message to Paris

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  • ANKARA: A second message to Paris

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    May 9 2006


    A second message to Paris

    source: Hurriyet

    In the lead-up to debates on May 18 in the French Parliament over the
    draft of a bill which would mandate prison sentences for people
    publicly denying Armenian genocide claims, Ankara has called Turkish
    Ambassador to Paris, Osman Koruturk, back to the capital "for
    consultations."

    Preceding the call-back of Ambassador Koruturk, the Turkish envoy to
    the Canadian capital of Ottowa, Ambassador Aydemir Erman, was also
    called back to Ankara for consultations, this following the Canadian
    government's decision to use the word "genocide" in reference to
    Turkey in a statement issued on April 24. Spokesman for the Foreign
    Ministry, Namik Tan, has confirmed the calling back to Ankara of both
    Koruturk and Erman. Said Tan, "Our ambassadors have returned to
    Ankara for consultations for a brief period in light of certain
    recent developments."

    The Turkish ambassadors to Canada and France met yesterday in Ankara
    with Undersecretary of the Foreign Ministry Ali Tuygan, and then with
    ambassadors from Canada and France to Ankara. Following the 2001
    acceptance by the French Parliament of the Armenian genocide, Ankara
    at that time also called back its Ambassador to Paris, Sonmez Koksal,
    for consultations. Koksal wound up staying in Ankara for 6 months
    before returning. Work is continuing in Ankara to determine what
    shape the official reaction from Turkey will take if the French
    Parliament does accept the current draft of the bill proposing jail
    time for those who deny the Armenian genocide.

    Sources in Ankara say that there is a stong possibility that Turkish
    President Ahmet Necdet Sezer will either write an urgent letter to
    French President Jacques Chirac, or that he will call him, in the
    lead-up to May 18. It is also expected that Ankara will put a special
    focus on the cooperation between Renault and Turkey in its
    communication with French officials over the next week. Other sources
    say that in the event France does legalize the controversial bill,
    France may find itself, like Canada, dis-invited from bidding on
    contracts for the nuclear power plant planned for the Black Sea city
    of Sinop.
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