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Turkish Anger Ahead French Parliament's Debate On Armenian Genocide

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  • Turkish Anger Ahead French Parliament's Debate On Armenian Genocide

    TURKISH ANGER AHEAD FRENCH PARLIAMENT'S DEBATE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL

    Arabesques, Algeria
    Oct 10 2006

    There is growing anger in Turkey at a bill to be debated by the French
    Parliament on Thursday which will make denial of the mass killing of
    Armenians under the Turkish Ottoman empire a criminal offense. Turkish
    government officials have warned about the political and economic
    repercussions if the bill passes and becomes law.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan at a meeting of his party
    on the weekend asked sarcastically whether French officials would put
    him in jail if he were to cast doubt on the Armenian genocide during
    a visit to France.

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul has warned that if the bill is passed,
    it could jeopardise French participation in major economic projects,
    including the planned construction of a nuclear plant in Turkey.

    Both Gul and Turkish president Ahmet Necdet Sezer sent letters to their
    counterparts, respectively Philippe Douste-Blazy and Jacques Chirac,
    stressing the possible negative consequences of passing the bill.

    Turkey's powerful military establishment has also joined the growing
    chorus of protests against France. The country' top military commander,
    the Chief of General Staff Gen. Yasar Buyukanit said Turkey would
    cut military ties with France if the bill was adopted.

    Also ahead of the French Parliament's debate on the bill, the Turkish
    Parliament are set to discuss a bill on Wednesday that would foresee
    penalties for any denial of the killings of Algerians under French
    colonial rule.

    Business chambers and consumer associations have also called for a
    boycott of French products.

    Zafer Caglayan, the chairman of Ankara Chamber of Industry declared
    that he would say "there is no Armenian genocide" on his scheduled
    speech to the Paris Chamber of Commerce and Industry on 12 October.

    "I will be the first to be penalised on that bill," said Caglayan
    who also proposed visas for French nationals visiting Turkey.

    But Turkey has not been alone in raising objections to the French bill.

    The EU's Enlargement Commisioner Olli Rehn said in Brussels that
    while France asks for more freedom of expression in Turkey, the
    French parliament itself will debate a bill that will limit freedom
    of expression in France.

    According to some estimates over a million Armenians died during
    1915- 1917 through forced removals and planned massacres by the
    Turkish authorities.

    The Turkish government and several international historians reject
    the label "genocide," and claim that the deaths among the Armenians
    were not a result of a state-sponsored plan of mass extermination,
    but of inter-ethnic strife, disease and famine during the turmoil of
    World War I.

    In Turkey it is a criminal offence to label the killing as a genocide.

    France is Turkey's fifth biggest partner in exports and imports.

    Turkey's exports to France last year totalled 3.7 billion dollars
    while iimports reached 5.8 billion dollars. Major French companies
    including Renault, Axa, Danone and BNP Paribas and Carrefour have
    great amounts of investments in Turkey.
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