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France lays genocide bill in way of Turkey's EU bid

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  • France lays genocide bill in way of Turkey's EU bid

    EurActiv.com, Belgium
    Oct 13 2006

    France lays genocide bill in way of Turkey's EU bid

    In Short:

    The National Assembly has passed a draft law that would sanction the
    denial of mass killings of Armenians in Turkey during the First World
    War, causing uproar in Ankara and condemnation from Brussels.

    The bill, which still needs a second reading before it becomes law,
    has triggered angry reactions from Ankara, with Economics Minister
    Ali Babacan saying that he could not rule out commercial consequences
    for France.

    In a statement, the Turkish Foreign Ministry described the vote as "a
    severe blow" to "long-standing historical relations between Turkey
    and France" and blamed the attempt as "irresponsible".

    In Brussels, the spokeswoman for enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn,
    Krisztina Nagy, said the bill "would prohibit dialogue which is
    necessary for reconciliation on the issue."

    "It is not up to law to write history. Historians need to have
    debate," Nagy said.

    The vote comes on the heels of a visit by President Chirac to Yerevan
    in September 2006 where he called for Turkey to recognise the mass
    killings as genocide.

    In a related development, Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk was awarded
    the Nobel Prize for Literature on 12 October. Ankara had charged
    Pamuk for "denigrating Turkishness" in public remarks about the
    Armenian killings but had later dropped the case following European
    pressures.

    Turkish lawmakers on 11 October proposed a counter-bill that would
    recognise an "Algerian genocide" carried out by colonial French
    forces in 1945.
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