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Turkish MPs Drop Proposal To Hit Back At France With Algeria Law

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  • Turkish MPs Drop Proposal To Hit Back At France With Algeria Law

    TURKISH MPS DROP PROPOSAL TO HIT BACK AT FRANCE WITH ALGERIA LAW

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 11, 2006 Wednesday

    Turkish legislators Wednesday dropped proposals to brand as genocide
    the killings of Algerians under French colonial rule.

    The drafts had been submitted in retaliation to a French bill that,
    if accepted, would provide jail terms for those who deny that Turks
    committed genocide against Armenians during World War I.

    "We should not fall in France's position. We should avoid the same
    mistake of writing history with parliamentary decisions," Mehmet
    Dulger, a senior lawmaker from the ruling Justice and Development
    Party, said during the debate at the parliament's justice commission.

    Ibrahim Ozdogan from the opposition center-right Motherland Party,
    and the author of one of the three drafts the commission examined,
    argued that European countries should rethink the massacres of their
    own colonial past.

    "The murderer has come to take the judge's seat," he said.

    After a three-hour debate, commission members voted to refer the
    proposals to a sub-committee for further discussion, a move that
    effectively freezes the proposals.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had urged legislators Tuesday to
    refrain from any retaliatory action, saying, "we do not clean filth
    with filth."

    The French draft, to be debated and voted at the National Assembly
    in Paris on Thursday, foresees one year in prison and a 45,000-euro
    (57,000-dollar) fine for denying that Armenians were victims of
    genocide during World War I.

    Infuriated by the move, Ankara has warned that if the bill is adopted,
    bilateral ties will suffer and French companies will be barred from
    major economic projects in Turkey.

    Two of the drafts examined Wednesday call for the recognition of
    the killings of Algerians under French colonial rule as genocide and
    provide jail terms for those who deny it.

    The third draft called for the imprisonment of those who assert
    Armenians were victims of genocide under the Ottoman Empire.

    The justice commission is the first instance where bills are debated
    before being sent to a vote at the general assembly.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label, arguing that 300,000 Armenians
    and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians took
    up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with invading
    Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart.
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