Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Ankara warns Paris not to risk its friendship

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

  • ANKARA: Ankara warns Paris not to risk its friendship

    Turkish Daily News
    Oct 7 2006

    Ankara warns Paris not to risk its friendship
    Saturday, October 7, 2006

    Turkey's people will perceive the adoption of controversial
    'genocide' bill as a hostile attitude on the part of France, the
    Foreign Ministry says, as the prime minister will today discuss the
    problem with French businessmen in Istanbul

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News


    Turkey has reminded France of the importance it attributes to
    bilateral political and economic ties between the two countries as
    well as of the sensitivity of Turkey's people regarding a highly
    contentious bill that penalizes any denial of an Armenian "genocide"
    at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

    "The Armenian issue has poisoned bilateral ties in the past, but
    the bill will inflict irreparable damage to our relationship,"
    Foreign Ministry spokesman Namýk Tan said on Friday, referring to the
    vote at the French National Assembly scheduled for Oct. 12 at the
    request of the main opposition Socialist Party, the bill's architect.


    The spokesman clearly warned that the move could jeopardize
    "investment, the fruit of years of work, and France will -- so to
    speak -- lose Turkey."

    President Ahmet Necdet Sezer sent a letter this week to his French
    counterpart, Jacques Chirac, on the issue and Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdoðan will discuss the problem on Saturday with French
    businessmen in Istanbul, Tan said.

    Though the conservative majority in the French Assembly opposes the
    bill, Turkey fears many opponents will not vote against it for fear
    of upsetting France's 400,000-strong Armenian diaspora ahead of
    elections next year.

    "The Armenian lobby should abandon backstage games and come up with
    concrete arguments supported by historical facts," diplomatic sources
    earlier said, referring to Ankara's proposal last year to establish a
    joint committee of Turkish and Armenian experts to study allegations
    of an Armenian genocide in the final days of the Ottoman Empire.

    --Boundary_(ID_gJCoGFNyIPa+seJFgxazRg)--
Working...
X