Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: France Shelves Sensitive Armenian Bill Vote

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: France Shelves Sensitive Armenian Bill Vote

    FRANCE SHELVES SENSITIVE ARMENIAN BILL VOTE

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 19 2006

    The French Parliament on Thursday indefinitely postponed voting on
    a controversial bill that aimed to introduce prison terms to those
    who question the Armenian genocide claims.

    During yesterday's special session of Parliament, several deputies
    from the Socialist Party, which prepared the bill, as well as ruling
    Union for Popular Movement (UMP) deputies, who criticized the bill,
    took the floor, and the debate lasted longer than planned.

    Parliament Speaker Jean Louis Debre closed the session without
    holding a vote, saying that they had run out of time due to the long
    debate. Under the rules of the French Parliament, the bill can't
    return to Parliament's agenda before its next term, which opens in
    October. The socialists are not able to bring the same bill to the
    floor, and so they would be forced to prepare a new one.

    The bill, which proposed to make denial of the Armenian genocide claims
    a crime by introducing up to a year's imprisonment and a fine of up
    to 45,000 euros for those who question the controversial issue, was
    brought to the Parliament floor for debate by the socialists. As the
    postponement sparked criticism by mainly socialist parliamentarians,
    dozens of members of Armenian groups yelled, "The vote! The vote!" and
    pounded their fists for five minutes from a balcony over the assembly
    floor.

    Douste-Blazy rejects bill, but uses term 'genocide'

    During debate yesterday, French Foreign Minister Phillipe Douste-Blazy
    opposed any step towards approval of the Armenian bill, underlining
    that it would seriously harm reconciliation efforts by Turks and
    Armenians, but he did use the sensitive term "genocide" while referring
    to the brutal events of 1915.

    "Armenians are right in their 'genocide' case and they have the right
    to defend it. But I don't believe that this bill will have positive
    consequences," Douste-Blazy said in his address to the Parliament.

    Taking the floor in the name of the French government, the
    foreign minister urged the Parliament not to trespass on the duty
    of historians. He stressed that passage of the bill would harm
    reconciliation efforts between Turkey and Armenia, two countries that
    have no diplomatic relations.

    Referring to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's suggestion
    to establish commissions composed of both Turkish and Armenian
    historians to study the controversial events of 1915, Douste-Blazy
    called on France to give Turks and Armenians the opportunity to
    determine their joint history.

    He also urged France to follow a policy towards the promotion of
    peace and reconciliation, citing the fact that some 300,000 Turks are
    living in France and the two countries have historic, economic, and
    cultural ties. The French foreign minister's speech sparked criticism
    from deputies supporting passage of the bill.

    Armenians accuse the Ottoman Empire of deliberately massacring up to
    1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1919. Turkey stresses that
    these figures are inflated and says that far fewer Armenians died,
    due to civil unrest under the conditions of World War I and the
    collapse of the Ottoman Empire. Ankara suspended its diplomatic
    relations with Yerevan a decade ago due to Armenian occupation of
    the Azeri territories of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Turkey expects France to drop bill from agenda

    Turkey welcomed the shelving of the bill, but also called on France
    to drop the debate from Parliament's agenda altogether and instead
    support the Turkish suggestion to establish a joint historians'
    commission to study the 1915 events.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry made its request public in a written
    statement following the decision to shelve debate over the bill.

    Referring to the opposition of French historians, public opinion
    and Foreign Minister Douste-Blazy to the bill, the statement said:
    "Our expectations from France is that they drop the bill from
    Parliament's agenda and support the Turkish suggestion to establish
    a joint commission composed of Turkish and Armenian historians to
    investigate in detail the events of 1915, by studying the archives
    that will be made public later on."
Working...
X