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  • France Defers Armenian Issue

    FRANCE DEFERS ARMENIAN ISSUE
    Lara Marlowe in Paris

    Irish Times
    May 19, 2006

    FRANCE: There were cries of protest from left- and right-wing benches
    when Jean-Louis Debre, the speaker of the French National Assembly,
    suspended a stormy debate on the Armenian genocide yesterday.

    Armenian visitors in the public gallery chanted in unison:
    "Vote! Vote! Vote!" as gendarmes removed them.

    When the socialist parliamentary group filed the proposed law last
    month, few imagined it would be so divisive. The law is an addendum
    to that of January 2001, which publicly recognised the Armenian
    genocide of 1915. The new law, which may now never come to a vote,
    would make denying the Armenian Holocaust an offence punishable by
    up to one year's imprisonment and a fine of 45,000.

    After the national assembly voted the 2001 law, Turkey cancelled
    contracts with the French groups Thomson, Alcatel and Bouygues. Some
    French products were boycotted, and taxi-drivers in Istanbul and
    Ankara refused to take French passengers.

    This time the French and Turkish governments did their utmost to
    prevent the law passing. President Jacques Chirac appealed for a
    "spirit of responsibility" on this "sensitive question". The French
    ministry of trade circulated a list of French contracts with Turkey -
    worth $4.7 billion (3.7 billion) last year.

    The French nuclear power company Areva hopes to build Turkey's first
    reactors soon, and the French minister for foreign trade will visit
    Turkey with the heads of 40 companies on June 14th.

    The Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, threatened trade
    sanctions if the law passed, while the Turkish foreign minister warned
    of "irreparable damage" to relations.

    "Dear colleagues, we resisted the United States during the Iraq
    crisis," the right-wing UMP deputy Roland Blum said. "Surely we can
    stand up to the Turks!" His outburst was widely applauded.

    Western historians are nearly unanimous in recognising that, as the
    centre-right UDF deputy Francois Rochebloine recounted yesterday:
    "From April 1915, the Young Turk government unleashed the horrible
    process of the extermination of 1.5 million Armenians, through
    organised massacres . . . which prefigured the Jewish Holocaust
    two decades later." French deputies who followed their heads -
    and pocketbooks - opposed the law. Those who followed their hearts
    supported it. The main parties splintered, and there was plenty of
    hypocrisy to go around. The right dragged out debates on two other
    laws, to eat up the socialists' time slot before the Armenian debate.

    French opponents of the law do not deny the Armenian genocide
    happened. But many were burned by a 2005 law praising the alleged
    benefits of colonialism, which had to be rescinded due to public
    outrage.

    Jean-Marc Ayrault, the leader of the socialist parliamentary group, who
    accused the right of obstruction, is known to be at best a reluctant
    supporter of the law, because he wants historians - not politicians
    - to judge history. Mr Ayrault and fellow group presidents must
    now decide whether to continue the Armenian debate during the next
    socialist slot in November.

    In the meantime, there is bitter disappointment among many
    parliamentarians, not to mention the Armenians who demonstrated
    outside the assembly yesterday.

    "They gave [ the law] a third class funeral," said Patrick Devedjian,
    a UMP deputy of Armenian origin. He alluded to the defacing of
    memorials to the Armenian Holocaust this spring. "Memorials abroad
    are the only sepulchres we have, so it felt like a desecration to
    Armenians," he said.

    Mr Devedjian corrected the foreign minister, Philippe Douste-Blazy,
    when he alluded to "the memory of massacres committed in 1915",
    emphasising, "The genocide, Monsieur le Ministre".

    "The Armenian cause is just," Mr Douste-Blazy continued. "It must
    be defended and respected. But national representatives must take
    account of the interest of France . . . The text submitted to you
    would be considered, like it or not, as a hostile act by the vast
    majority of Turkish people."
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