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Turkey's EU bid hit by French bill on Armenians

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  • Turkey's EU bid hit by French bill on Armenians

    Financial Times (London, England)
    October 13, 2006 Friday
    London Edition 2

    Turkey's EU bid hit by French bill on Armenians

    By MARTIN ARNOLD, VINCENT BOLAND, DANIEL DOMBEY and GEORGE PARKER



    Turkey's prospects of joining the European Union took a heavy blow
    last night when France's National Assembly approved a bill that
    outraged Ankara and that critics say will set back the cause of
    reform within Turkey.

    The French legislation, which could still be blocked by the Senate,
    would make it a crime to deny that Armenians were the victims of
    genocide in the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

    The bill was read in Turkey as a sign that France was now permanently
    opposed to Ankara's bid to join the EU.

    Bulent Arinc, the parliamentary speaker, criticised France's "hostile
    attitude" towards Turkey. "This is a shameful decision. We are very
    sorry to see that this (bill) was passed only because of internal
    (French) politics."

    Turkey denies genocide, and the judicial authorities have prosecuted
    writers who have used the term to describe thekillings of Armenians.

    Opinion polls show a majority of French voters oppose Turkish
    membership. The issue is sensitive in France because of the country's
    450,000-strong Armenian community, which has grown rich and
    influential.

    Jacques Chirac, the French president, favours Turkish accession to
    the EU but prominent ministers such as Nicolas Sarkozy are opposed.
    Segolene Royal, the Socialists' leading presidential candidate, has
    been non-committal, saying she would defer to public opinion on the
    question.

    But Mr Chirac said on a visit to Armenia this month that Turkish
    recognition of the Armenian genocide should become a pre-condition of
    EU membership.

    Additional reporting by George Parker in Brussels and Daniel Dombey
    in London
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