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ANKARA: =?unknown?q?Erdo=F0an?= Slams Sarkozy's Conditions

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  • ANKARA: =?unknown?q?Erdo=F0an?= Slams Sarkozy's Conditions

    ERDOðAN SLAMS SARKOZY'S CONDITIONS

    Turkish Daily News
    Oct 10 2006

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan blasted conditions French
    Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy laid down in return for voting down
    a controversial bill penalizing any denial of the alleged genocide
    of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

    Presidential hopeful Sarkozy said on France-Inter radio that he had
    spoken with Erdoðan on the telephone twice with regard to the French
    bill, which will be debated at the National Assembly on Thursday,
    and told him that they could oppose the bill if Turkey opens its
    border gate with neighboring Armenia, scrap Article 301, which the
    European Union says is restrictive of freedom of expression, from
    its penal code, and establish a joint commission between Turkey and
    Armenia to study the genocide allegations.

    In response to Sarkozy's conditions, Erdoðan said it was the Turkish
    side which proposed the establishment of a joint commission for
    academic debates on genocide allegations and made clear that Turkey's
    good intentions were not welcomed by Armenia, which rejected the
    proposal.

    On Article 301, Erdoðan said the French suggestion on that issue
    had nothing to do with the issue, stressing that France was not in
    a position to demand something from Turkey.

    "First of all France should take a look at itself," Erdoðan said.

    Facing pressure from the EU to amend or scrap Article 301 under which
    scores of Turkish intellectuals have been put on trial, Turkey has
    accused the bloc of applying double standards, saying that France
    itself is blocking free speech under the bill that it plans to
    legislate.

    On opening the border gate, Erdoðan said Armenia should first act
    with good will toward Turkey's approach.

    The border gate between Turkey and Armenia has been closed for more
    than a decade. Turkey closed the gate and severed its diplomatic
    relations with Armenia after Armenian troops occupied Azeri territory
    of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Ankara now says normalization of ties depends on Armenian withdrawal
    from Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as on progress in resolution of a
    series of bilateral disagreements, including Armenia stopping to
    support Armenian diaspora efforts to get international recognition
    for the alleged genocide.

    --Boundary_(ID_i03bILoDs1a18XHzxKfRhg)- -
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