Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

French MPs Back Armenia Genocide Bill, Turkey Angry

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • French MPs Back Armenia Genocide Bill, Turkey Angry

    French MPs Back Armenia Genocide Bill, Turkey Angry

    By REUTERS
    Published: October 12, 2006
    Filed at 1:31 p.m. ET

    PARIS (Reuters) - France's lower house of parliament approved a bill
    on Thursday making it a crime to deny Armenians suffered genocide at
    the hands of Ottoman Turks, provoking anger in Turkey and raising
    fresh doubts about its EU ambitions.

    Ankara said the vote would damage ties between the two NATO allies and
    French firms operating in Turkey feared they would suffer an immediate
    backlash.

    ``This will be an unforgettable shame on France. France can never
    describe itself as a country of freedoms again,'' said Turkish Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gul.

    Turkey denies accusations some 1.5 million Armenians were massacred
    during the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire in World War One,
    arguing that Armenian deaths were a part of general partisan fighting
    in which both sides suffered.

    The French government distanced itself from Thursday's bill, calling
    it ``unnecessary and untimely,'' and indicated that it might never
    become law as it still needs to be ratified by both the upper house
    Senate and French president.

    But Turkish officials, fearing a nationalist backlash that could put
    the pro-European Ankara government on the defensive, said the damage
    had already been done.

    The legislation calls for a one-year prison term and 45,000 euro
    ($56,570) fine for anyone denying the 1915 genocide -- the same
    sanction as for denying the Nazi genocide of Jews.

    ``Does a genocide committed in World War One have less value than a
    genocide committed in World War Two? Obviously not,'' Philippe
    Pomezec, a parliamentarian with the ruling Union for a Popular
    Movement (UMP), said during the debate.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan hailed the vote as a
    ``natural continuation of France's principled and consistent defense
    of human and historic rights and values.''

    HOSTAGE TO POLITICS

    However, analysts saw the move more as a play for Armenian diaspora
    votes in next year's presidential election and said it highlighted how
    easily Turkey's EU candidacy can become a hostage to domestic politics
    in EU member states.

    ``It is the intention of those French politicians who backed this bill
    to antagonize Turkey, to push it to the limit and force it to throw in
    the towel,'' said Cengiz Candar, an EU expert at Istanbul's Bahcesehir
    University.

    Some 60 protesters carried a black wreath down Istanbul's main
    commercial street on Thursday and laid it in front of the French
    consulate.

    Most French people oppose Turkey joining the 25-nation bloc and fear
    over its potential membership was one of the reasons why France voted
    last year to reject the EU constitution.

    Anti-Turkish feeling was palpable as lawmakers left parliament on
    Thursday. Influential UMP politician Patrick Devedjian, himself of
    Armenian descent, said Muslim Turkey was not a democratic country and
    did not deserve EU membership.

    ``It is like they are asking to enter a club but have already smashed
    its windows,'' he told Reuters television.

    The European Commission warned France that its bill could hinder
    efforts to end decades of dispute over the killings and noted that
    criteria for talks on Turkey's possible EU entry did not include
    recognition of the Armenian killings as genocide.

    An hour after the vote, Turkey's best-known novelist, Orhan Pamuk, won
    the Nobel prize for Literature.

    Pamuk recently went on trial for insulting ``Turkishness'' after
    telling a Swiss newspaper nobody in Turkey dared mention the Armenian
    massacres. The court eventually dropped charges.

    French businesses fear trade will suffer because of the row, with
    French exports to Turkey worth 4.66 billion euros in 2005.

    ``Time will show. But I cannot say it will not have any
    consequences,'' Turkish Economics Minister Ali Babacan told reporters
    in Brussels.
Working...
X