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Turkey's EU plans threatened by genocide dispute with the French

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  • Turkey's EU plans threatened by genocide dispute with the French

    The Daily Telegraph (LONDON)

    (Filed: 10/10/2006)

    Turkey's EU plans threatened by genocide dispute with the French

    By David Rennie, Europe Correspondent

    Turkey's painful progress towards European Union membership has been
    plunged into crisis by a dispute with the French over the massacre of
    Armenians during and after the 1914-18 war.

    A Socialist-backed proposal, which could pass the National Assembly on
    Thursday, would make it illegal in France to deny that the killings
    amounted to genocide by Turkey.

    The legislation, which has gained support from Right-wing assembly
    members, would see anyone denying that a genocide took place jailed
    for up to five years.

    Armenians claim that as many as 1.5 million of their ancestors were
    killed between 1915 and 1923 in an organised campaign to eradicate
    them from eastern Turkey.

    The Turkish government fiercely denies a genocide, saying that
    hundreds of thousands of Turks and Armenians died in a civil war.

    Under Turkish law, it is illegal to accuse the state of genocide.
    Scores of Turkish writers and intellectuals who have debated the
    massacres publicly have faced prosecution under article 301 of the
    penal code, outlawing insults to "Turkishness".

    The Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, reacted with
    indignation to the French proposal, asking: "What would you do if the
    Turkish prime minister came to France and denied that the genocide had
    taken place? Arrest him?"

    In retaliation, the Turkish parliament's justice committee will on
    Wednesday discuss a draft plan to imprison people who deny that France
    committed genocide during its colonial rule over Algeria.

    Thousands of protesters who marched in Istanbul at the weekend vowed
    to mount a trade boycott of French goods.

    Mr Erdogan also met representatives from several French multinationals
    on Saturday, including the car makers Peugeot and Renault and the
    supermarket chain Carrefour, to press home the serious risks to the
    multi-billion pound annual trade between Turkey and France.

    The draft law has been taken up by the leading French presidential
    candidate Nicolas Sarkozy, a long-time opponent of Turkish entry into
    Europe.

    He revealed yesterday that he had telephoned Mr Erdogan, saying his
    party might still drop its proposal for the law if Turkey met three
    conditions: dropping the penal law forbidding mention of the genocide;
    opening the Turkish-Armenian border; and equal representation on a
    joint Turkish-Armenian research committee.

    Last week, President Jacques Chirac, publicly a supporter of Turkish
    EU membership, suggested that recognition of "genocide" against the
    Armenians should be a precondition of EU entry.

    Mr Sarkozy raised the stakes by saying in a radio interview that, even
    if Turkey admitted genocide, that should not guarantee it EU entry.

    The EU enlargement commissioner, Olli Rehn, expressed concerns that
    the French law would abruptly shut down the first signs that the
    Turkish government would be willing to tolerate some historical
    re-examination of the killings.

    Supporters of Turkey's EU entry said France was being "completely unhelpful."

    Andrew Duff, a Liberal Democrat MEP and prominent ally of Turkey in
    Brussels, said he spent yesterday meeting senior Turkish MPs, who
    asked him: "Why are you asking us to defend freedom of expression in
    Turkey, when France is proposing to shut down freedom of expression in
    France?"

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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