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Crisis Looms In Turkish-French Ties Over Genocide Bill

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  • Crisis Looms In Turkish-French Ties Over Genocide Bill

    CRISIS LOOMS IN TURKISH-FRENCH TIES OVER GENOCIDE BILL
    by Hande Culpan

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 10, 2006 Tuesday

    Ankara launched a scathing attack against Paris on Tuesday, accusing
    it of losing its reason over a draft law on the World War I massacres
    of Armenians and warning that bilateral ties will suffer if the bill
    is enacted.

    The draft, scheduled for debate and a vote before the French National
    Assembly on Thursday, calls for one year in prison and a 45,000 euro
    (57,000 dollar) fine for anyone who denies that Armenians were the
    victims of a genocide under the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of
    modern Turkey.

    "We expect Paris to avoid this blunder, this political accident
    that will harm Turkish-French relations," Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan told the parliamentary group of his Justice and
    Development Party in a speech interrupted by applause.

    "The EU must absolutely take a stand against this eclipse of reason
    in France," he said, charging that the bill would violate freedom
    of expression, a basic EU norm that Turkey itself is under pressure
    to respect.

    Drawn up by the Socialist opposition, the bill was first submitted
    in May, but the debate ran out of time after filibustering from the
    ruling UMP party bloc.

    Turkish officials believe it stands a good chance of being voted
    Thursday -- as a gesture to France's large Armenian community ahead
    of legislative elections next year -- as many lawmakers opposed to
    the bill will be away in their constituencies.

    Ankara has warned that French firms will be barred from major tenders,
    including one for the planned construction of the country's first
    nuclear power plant, if the bill is accepted.

    "The French will lose Turkey," Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul warned
    on Sunday.

    The Ankara Chamber of Commerce, which groups some 3,200 businesses,
    and the Consumers' Union, a non-governmental consumer rights group,
    have threatend to boycott French goods.

    In 2001, Turkey sidelined French companies from public tenders and
    cancelled projects awarded to French firms when parliament adopted
    a resolution recognising the massacres as genocide.

    At stake now is a flourishing trade between the two countries that
    totalled 8.2 billion euros (10 billion dolars) in 2005.

    About 250 French firms are active in Turkey, providing employment
    for about 65,000 people.

    France also plays a leading role in foreign direct investment in
    Turkey with 2.1 billion dollars (1.6 billion euros) last year and 328
    million dollars (260 million euros) in the first seven months of 2006.

    But some commentators have warned that suspending economic ties with
    France would have a bruising affect on Turkey, for which foreign
    investment is vital as it recovers from two severe financial crises.

    Turkey could also retaliate politically, keeping bilateral contacts at
    a minimum and at the lowest diplomatic level and possibly cancelling
    bilateral visits.

    One senior lawmaker warned the Turkish parliament could retaliate with
    a law proclaiming the killing of Algerians under French colonial rule
    as genocide and its denial a jailable offense, but Erdogan rejected
    the suggestion.

    "No," he said, "we will not retaliate in kind -- we do not clean
    filth with filth."

    The Armenian massacres are one of most controversial episodes in
    Turkish history and open debate on the issue has only recently begun
    in Turkey, often sending nationalist sentiment into frenzy.

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

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

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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