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French Government Distances Itself From Armenian Genocide Bill

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  • French Government Distances Itself From Armenian Genocide Bill

    FRENCH GOVERNMENT DISTANCES ITSELF FROM ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    October 10, 2006 Tuesday 1:56 PM EST

    DPA POLITICS France Diplomacy Turkey French government distances
    itself from Armenian genocide bill Paris The French government on
    Tuesday distanced itself from a bill, drawn up by the opposition
    Socialist Party, that would make it a crime to deny that Turkey had
    committed genocide against

    the Armenian people more than 90 years ago.

    The bill, which is to be examined Thursday in the National Assembly,
    "does not involve the government" and "is not necessary," foreign
    ministry spokesman Jean-Baptiste Mattei told journalists in Paris.

    The proposed law has provoked rage in Turkey, which has threatened
    to carry out economic boycotts against French companies. In 2001,
    bilateral relations suffered a similar setback when France passed a
    law in which the murder of thousands of Armenians in the declining
    days of the Ottoman Empire was characterized as "genocide."

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday said the
    proposed law was a blow against freedom of speech and that 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 colonizers any more. That era is over," Erdogan said.

    It was not clear if the bill would receive enough votes to pass
    through the National Assembly. On Thursday, the majority UMP party
    said most of its deputies would not take part in the vote.

    The dispute comes less than two weeks after French President Jacques
    Chirac, on a visit to Armenia, said he wanted Turkey to admit

    the Armenian genocide before it could join the European Union,
    a condition no one else has ever set for Ankara.
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