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ANKARA: Socialists insist on bringing Armenian bill to French Parl.

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  • ANKARA: Socialists insist on bringing Armenian bill to French Parl.

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 12 2006

    Socialists insist on bringing Armenian bill to French Parliament

    French Socialist Party (PS) Secretary-General Francois Hollande
    yesterday expressed his party's insistence on bringing a bill
    stipulating prison terms for questioning the Armenian genocide claims
    to the French Parliament's floor.

    Hollande's remarks came in response to a call from French scholars
    and intellectuals urging Parliament to remove the Armenian bill from
    the Parliament's agenda at next Thursday's gathering, underling that
    history should be left to historians.

    "I understand historians' criticism but to debate history is also the
    duty of parliaments," said Hollande, stressing that approval of the
    bill by Parliament won't block historians' debates on the Armenian
    genocide claims.

    Urging Turkey to recognize the controversial Armenian events,
    Hollande also claimed that one of the requirements for Ankara to
    become a member of the European Union is recognition of the genocide
    claims.

    French historians, in a joint statement on Tuesday, expressed strong
    opposition to the PS' move to bring the Armenian bill to French
    Parliament for approval, warning that history teachers will become
    "prisoners" if the bill is approved.

    The same historians in a joint declaration four months ago called on
    Parliament to annual its recognition of the Armenian genocide claims
    -- taken in 2001 -- underlining that parliaments cannot write
    history.

    Turkish ambassadors return to posts

    The Turkish ambassadors to France and Canada, who were recalled to
    Turkey for consultations, left Turkey yesterday to return to their
    posts.

    Turkish Ambassador to France Osman Koruturk and Ambassador to Canada
    Aydemir Erman were recalled this week for "a short time" for
    consultations, announced the Foreign Ministry on Monday.

    Foreign Ministry spokesperson Namik Tan stated that while Ambassador
    Koruturk was recalled for consultations concerning the French
    Parliament's possible approval of the Armenian bill, Ambassador Erman
    was recalled over Canada's move to recognize the 1915 events as
    "genocide." "It's anticipated that the ambassadors will return to
    their posts after the consultations," Tan also said on Monday.

    Sezer urges Chirac to block Armenian bill

    Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer this week sent a letter to his
    French counterpart Jacques Chirac urging him to block the possible
    approval of the Armenian bill, underling that it would be to the
    advantage of neither country.

    Calling on his French counterpart not to take any action that would
    to ruin or upset cooperation and friendship between Turkey and
    France, Sezer also stressed that approval of the controversial bill
    would deal a serious blow to freedom of expression and thought, two
    aspects of life that reminded Chirac are important to the French way
    of life.

    Sezer's letter followed a similar one from Parliament Speaker Bulent
    Arinc to his French counterpart in which Arinc warned French
    Parliament not to take a decision that would undermine bilateral
    relations between the two countries and efforts towards a
    normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia.

    In related news, Ankara Chamber of Trade and Commerce (ATO) Chair
    Sinan Aygun yesterday sent a letter to its French counterpart calling
    on the withdrawal of the Armenian bill, stressing that such a
    political move would damage commercial and economic relations between
    the two countries as Turkish companies and the Turkish public are
    preparing to boycott French goods and services.

    Also yesterday Turkish Parliament's European Union Harmonization
    Commission head Yasar Yakis dismissed the consequences of a possible
    approval of the Armenian bill, saying that the move won't affect
    Turkey's EU accession process. "Turkey doesn't have to do what each
    European state wants," he added.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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