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Turkey, France: Ankara Seeks French Businesses' Help Against Armenia

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  • Turkey, France: Ankara Seeks French Businesses' Help Against Armenia

    TURKEY, FRANCE: ANKARA SEEKS FRENCH BUSINESSES' HELP AGAINST ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL

    Monday Morning, Lebanon
    Oct 16 2006

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has asked French companies
    to lobby French legislators against a parliamentary bill making it
    an offense to deny that Armenians were the victims of genocide

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan met in Istanbul with
    representatives of French companies doing business in Turkey in a bid
    to enlist their support against a controversial French bill that has
    threatened to poison bilateral ties.

    The bill, to be debated in the French Parliament, makes it an offense
    to deny that Armenians were the victims of genocide under the Ottoman
    Empire during World War I.

    "Erdogan asked French companies to lobby French legislators to try
    to abort the bill", Mustafa Abdullahoglu, an executive with a firm
    he did not name, told reporters after the meeting. "He said the bill
    would damage bilateral ties if adopted".

    Abdullahoglu said he feared a boycott of French goods in Turkey if
    the bill was passed.

    Representatives of carmakers Peugeot and Renault, the food giant
    Danone, the construction materials producer Lafarge and supermarket
    chain Carrefour were among the participants in the meeting.

    Members of a Turkish-French business group flew to Paris to lobby
    against the bill, which calls for a five-year prison term and a fine of
    45,000 euros (57,000 dollars) for anyone who denies that the massacres
    of Armenians constituted a genocide.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry warned that the adoption of the bill
    could jeopardize "investments, the fruit of years of work, and France
    will -- so to speak -- lose Turkey".

    The bill was first submitted in May but the debate ran out of
    parliamentary time before a vote could be held.

    The head of Turkey's largest business group TUSIAD also condemned
    the bill, calling it the reflection of "fears that Turkey's bid
    for European Union membership can materialize" and an attempt at
    "disrupting efforts for constructive dialogue and analytical debate".

    "I appeal to French politicians: Don't you see that you are
    jeopardizing all the political, economic and social relations that
    France has had with Turkey for centuries for the sake of your own
    political interests?" Omer Sabanci said in a statement, carried by
    the Anatolia news agency.

    In 2001 France passed a resolution recognizing the killings as
    "genocide", prompting Ankara to retaliate by sidelining French
    companies from public tenders and cancelling several projects awarded
    to French firms.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered
    in orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917. Turkey rejects the
    genocide label, arguing that 300,000 Armenians and at least as many
    Turks died in civil strife when Armenians rebelled against Ottoman
    rule in Eastern Anatolia and sided with invading Russian troops as
    the Ottoman Empire was falling apart.
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