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ANKARA; 'France Will Lose Turkey If So-Called Genocide Law Adopted'

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  • ANKARA; 'France Will Lose Turkey If So-Called Genocide Law Adopted'

    'FRANCE WILL LOSE TURKEY IF SO-CALLED GENOCIDE LAW ADOPTED'
    By Bahtiyar Kucuk

    Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 7 2006

    ANKARA - The Turkish Foreign Ministry warned Paris that bilateral
    relations would suffer if the French parliament approves a law making
    it a punishable offence to deny the so-called Armenian genocide.

    Namik Tan, a foreign ministry spokesman, told French officials that
    France would, so to speak, lose Turkey.

    "The Armenian issue has poisoned bilateral ties in the past, but the
    bill will inflict irreparable damage on our relationship, The Turkish
    public opinion would perceive the approval of the bill as a hostile
    act. Adoption of the bill would mean the elimination of freedom of
    expression in France," said Tan.

    There's some considerable volume of business between Turkey and France,
    Tan noted adding that French parliament's recognition of the draft
    bill would imperil the outcome of the work for many years to improve
    the situation between the two countries.

    There're some initiatives on the part of Turkey to prevent a possible
    parliamentary recognition of the draft bill, said Tan, and detailed
    those initiatives as follows:

    Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer wrote to his French counterpart
    Jacques Chirac on 4 Sept. 2006.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is due to have talks with
    French businessmen in Turkey.

    Erdogan will have a telephone conversation with French Prime Minister
    Philippe Douste Blazy.

    A commission of foreign affairs of the Turkish parliament was in
    France to voice their concerns.

    The Turkish embassy in Paris has held negotiations with French
    officials.

    While the bill will most likely pass parliamentary approval ahead of
    France's parliamentary elections, French businessmen with investment
    plans in Turkey are at unease.

    Debate on the bill, which was originally tabled in May, followed
    stern warnings from Ankara on the repercussions for bilateral and
    economic relations.

    Tan: The Armenian issue has poisoned bilateral ties in the past,
    but the bill will inflict irreparable damage to our relationship

    The Turkish capital warned Paris Friday that political and economic
    ties between them will suffer if the French Parliament approves 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 Namik Tan told reporters during a regular press
    briefing.

    The spokesman, with clear remarks, warned the move could jeopardize
    "investments, the fruit of years of work, and France will -- so to
    speak -- lose Turkey."

    The French National Assembly's decision for the vote, scheduled for
    Oct. 12, came at the request of the main opposition Socialist Party,
    the bill's architect.

    Appealing to the assembly to block the bill, Tan argued that adoption
    of the bill would mean the elimination of freedom of expression
    in France. "Our expectation is that France will avoid taking the
    wrong step."

    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.

    Tan said Turkey, too, faces presidential and parliamentary elections
    in 2007.

    "The people of Turkey will perceive this development as a hostile
    attitude on the part of France," he said. "This draft will deliver
    a heavy blow to bilateral relations and to the momentum previously
    achieved."
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