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Turkish Prime Minister Blasts French Parliament For Genocide Bill

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  • Turkish Prime Minister Blasts French Parliament For Genocide Bill

    TURKISH PRIME MINISTER BLASTS FRENCH PARLIAMENT FOR GENOCIDE BILL

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    October 10, 2006 Tuesday 9:51 AM EST

    DPA POLITICS Turkey Diplomacy France Turkish prime minister blasts
    French parliament for genocide bill Ankara Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan launched a scathing attack Tuesday on a bill before
    the French parliament that would make it a crime to deny the massacres
    of Armenians by Ottoman forces during and after the First World War.

    Speaking to party colleagues in Ankara, Erdogan said the proposed law
    was a blow for freedom of speech and tjat a "populist and cheap game"
    was being played by French politicians.

    "This wrong move will change nothing for Turkey but it will change a
    lot for France... When did it become France's duty to get involved
    in a problem between Turkey and Armenia. The world is not a campus
    for colonisers any more. That era is over," Erdogan said.

    Turkey admits there were massacres of Armenians during the last
    years of the Ottoman Empire but vehemently denies that the killings
    constituted a genocide.

    Armenian historians claim that as many as 1.5 million Christian
    Armenians were killed during and after the First World War and that
    the massacres were a clear genocide.

    Turkey counters that Armenians sided with invading Russian forces
    and that the numbers of Armenians killed was around 300,000.

    On Tuesday Erdogan repeated his call for a joint Turkish-Armenian
    conference of historians and lawyers to look into the claims, a call
    that has been previously rejected by Armenia.

    "Leave these decisions to historians, not politicians... We have no
    fears," Erdogan said.

    The government, opposition parties, business leaders and non-
    governmental organizations have all strongly criticized the proposed
    law that is to be debated by the French parliament on Thursday.

    Although the government has not explicitly outlined what action it
    may take if the bill passes.

    Public boycotts of French-owned companies would almost certainly be
    organized while official government actions such as banning French
    firms from taking part in military tenders would probably not be
    implemented until after the bill is signed into law by President
    Jacques Chirac.
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