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Turkey May Hit Back At France With Algeria 'Genocide' Law

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  • Turkey May Hit Back At France With Algeria 'Genocide' Law

    TURKEY MAY HIT BACK AT FRANCE WITH ALGERIA 'GENOCIDE' LAW

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 7, 2006 Saturday 9:11 AM GMT

    Turkey may retaliate to a draft French law making it a jailable
    offense to deny the Armenians were the victim of genocide under the
    Ottoman Empire with a similar law on French killings under colonial
    rule in Algeria, a senior lawmaker said in remarks published Saturday.

    Koksal Toptan, head of the Turkish parliament's justice commission,
    told the mass-selling Sabah daily he had initially ignored proposals
    made in May for Turkey to brand killings of Algerians under French
    colonial rule as genocide and introduce prison terms for those who
    deny it.

    "I just swept them under the carpet," he said.

    But following renewed attempts in France to pass a bill calling for
    five years in jail to anyone who denies Turks committed genocide
    against Armenians during World War I, Toptan said he had ordered
    that the proposals be put on the commission's agenda for Wednesday,
    a day before the French draft is debated in Paris.

    "What is France trying to do? Their attitude is damaging Turkish-French
    ties and is doing no good to Turkish-Armenian ties either," Toptan
    told Sabah.

    "If the French parliament is acting like that, we must give a response
    ... in the name of our pride," he said.

    The justice commission is the first instance where draft laws are
    debated before being sent to a vote at the general assembly.

    France already passed in 2001 a resolution recognizing the 1915-17
    killings of Armenians as genocide.

    The bill to criminalize genocide denial was first tabled in May but
    the debate ran out of parliamentary time before a vote could be held.

    Toptan said Turkish MPs had filed three proposals for retaliative laws.

    According to parliamentary records, two of them call for the
    recognition of the killings of Algerians under French colonial rule --
    from 1830 to 1962 -- as genocide and the introduction of jail terms
    for those who deny it.

    The third calls for the imprisonment of those who assert the Armenians
    were victims of genocide under Ottoman rule.

    All three proposals were sumbitted in May -- apparently in reaction
    to the debate in France.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label, arguing that 300,000 Armenians
    and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians rose
    for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with invading Russian
    troops as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart.

    On Friday, the Turkish foreign ministry warned that a positive vote
    at the French parliament next week could jeopardise "investments, the
    fruit of years of work, and France will -- so to speak -- lose Turkey".
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