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Royal Says Turkey Must Recognise Armenian Genocide

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  • Royal Says Turkey Must Recognise Armenian Genocide

    ROYAL SAYS TURKEY MUST RECOGNISE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
    By Kerstin Gehmlich

    Reuters, UK
    Oct 11 2006

    PARIS, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Turkey has to recognise Armenians suffered
    genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks if it wants to enter the
    European Union, French Socialist presidential frontrunner Segolene
    Royal said on Wednesday.

    Royal, who heads opinion polls to become the leftist party's candidate
    for next year's presidential poll, did not say whether she personally
    supported Turkey's EU membership, saying the French people would
    decide the issue in a referendum.

    "If Turkey should one day confirm its candidacy and enter Europe,
    it is obvious that it must recognise the Armenian genocide," Royal
    told a press conference.

    Royal was speaking just a day before the French parliament was to
    vote on a bill that will impose prison terms on anyone who denies
    the 1915 genocide of Armenians took place.

    The bill, proposed by Royal's Socialist party, has strained relations
    between Paris and Ankara, with Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
    telling France to examine its own colonial past.

    Ankara denies that some 1.5 million Armenians perished in a systematic
    genocide last century, saying large numbers of both Christian Armenians
    and Muslim Turks died in a partisan conflict raging at that time.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said he hoped France, "a country
    of freedoms", would not become "a country where people are jailed
    for expressing views and releasing documents".

    "If this bill is passed, Turkey will not lose anything but France
    will lose Turkey and it will no longer remain as France that boasts
    the values I mentioned," Gul told reporters.

    The European Commission has criticised the French bill, saying it
    undermines its efforts to persuade Turkey to increase freedom of
    expression by scrapping article 301 of the penal code used against
    Turkish intellectuals and writers.

    NO LECTURING

    Turkey began EU entry talks last October and France is especially
    cool on taking in the large, mainly Muslim nation.

    Royal said France had also found it painful to deal with darker
    chapters of its past.

    "It's not easy for certain countries to recognise a number of actions
    or episodes that are totally counter to the respect of human dignity,"
    she said.

    Asked whether she personally supported Turkey's entry into the EU,
    Royal said the French people would decide this issue in a referendum.

    Royal's likely conservative competitor for the 2007 poll, Interior
    Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, is a long-standing opponent of Turkey's
    EU entry.

    Some deputies in Sarkozy's UMP party say there is no need for the
    controversial bill, but the mood has toughened since President Jacques
    Chirac visited Armenia last month and said Turkey should recognise
    the genocide before joining the EU.

    UMP party officials expect around 60 of their 362 parliamentarians
    to back the motion, with most of the rest likely to skip the debate,
    handing victory to the Socialists.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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