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Chirac Says Sorry To Turkey For Armenian Bill

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  • Chirac Says Sorry To Turkey For Armenian Bill

    CHIRAC SAYS SORRY TO TURKEY FOR ARMENIAN BILL

    Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand
    Oct 16 2006

    ANKARA: French leader Jacques Chirac has told Turkish Prime Minister
    Tayyip Erdogan he is sorry French lawmakers approved a bill making
    it a crime to deny Armenians were victims of genocide at the hands
    of Ottoman Turks.

    "Chirac called me and told me he was sorry and he said that he is
    listening to our statements and he thinks we are right and he will
    do what he can in the upcoming process," he told his AK Party, in
    broadcast comments, during a dinner on Saturday (local time).

    France is home to Europe's largest Armenian diaspora.

    Turkey denies any genocide, saying the Armenians were victims of
    a partisan war that also claimed many Muslim Turkish lives. Turkey
    accuses Armenians of carrying out massacres while siding with invading
    Russian troops during World War 1.

    The French president's office did not comment when contacted about
    Chirac's call to Erdogan on Saturday morning.

    Erdogan, facing a rise in nationalism ahead of next year's
    parliamentary elections, warned on Friday that Ankara was considering
    retaliatory measures against France.

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul repeated the government's call for
    France to scrap the bill, which has complicated Turkey's European
    Union accession bid.

    AdvertisementAdvertisement"We are worried. Turkish-French relations
    have been very deeply wounded. I hope that French politicians and
    statesmen will see this and will take the necessary measure to prevent
    further damage to France's credibility," Gul told reporters.

    FEAR BACKLASH

    French businesses fear the bill will have repercussions for their
    business in Turkey, a fast-growing market which imported 4.7 billion
    euros' worth of French goods in 2005.

    About 100 people protested outside the French consulate in Istanbul
    on Sunday, throwing eggs at the building.

    Immediately after Thursday's vote, the French Foreign Ministry said
    it did not support the lower house bill, calling it "unnecessary and
    untimely" and indicating it might never become law as it still needed
    to be ratified by both the upper house Senate and French president.

    France is believed to be home to the largest Armenian immigrant
    community in western Europe, with up to half a million people of
    Armenian descent living there.

    They make up a powerful political lobby which cannot be overlooked
    just seven months ahead of a presidential election.

    However, some Turks think French politicians have a broader agenda
    and are using the bill to try to block Ankara's EU bid.

    Chirac and the two leading candidates to replace him in polls due
    next May - Nicolas Sarkozy and Segolene Royal - all say Ankara must
    accept the genocide before joining the bloc.

    The European Commission has said that recognition of the genocide
    was not a precondition for Turkey entering the EU.
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