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ANKARA: Armenian Bill Continues To Set World At Odds

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Bill Continues To Set World At Odds

    ARMENIAN BILL CONTINUES TO SET WORLD AT ODDS

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Oct 16 2006

    US Armenians welcome 'genocide' bill

    People of Armenian origin living in the U.S. welcomed the French
    Parliament's passage last week of a bill making it illegal to deny
    the Armenian genocide claims.

    In a written statement over the weekend, an Armenian group expressed
    its pleasure over passage of the bill but added that it still needs
    the approval of the French Senate and President Jacques Chirac.

    In related news, during a phone conversation over the weekend President
    Chirac assured Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that he won't sign
    the bill.

    French President Chirac expressed his disappointment over the bill
    and told Erdogan that he will do best to block it from becoming law.

    Underlining that the Armenian bill is related to next year's elections
    in France, Chirac said that Armenian voters living in France had also
    influenced its passage by Parliament, stressing that the development
    shouldn't hurt good relations between Turkey and France.

    2 Lang invites scholars to debate Armenia genocide claims

    Former French Culture Minister and Socialist Deputy Jack Lang over
    the weekend called on Turkish and Armenian scholars to organize
    seminars about their common history to shed light on the Armenian
    genocide claims.

    Stating that the bill is unconstitutional and would erode freedom of
    _expression, Lang stated that France should assist the debate between
    Armenians and Turkish intellectuals to institutionalize a dialogue
    between societies instead of making laws.

    3 Rasmussen: Freedom of _expression is limited

    The Danish premier, who justified the publication of the controversial
    Prophet Muhammed cartoons in a Danish newspaper this year, claiming
    that they were an _expression of freedom of speech, over the weekend
    criticized the French Parliament's approval of the Armenian bill,
    stressing that the move limits freedom of _expression.

    Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who at the time stated that
    he didn't have the authority to ban the publication of the Muhammed
    cartoons since it was an issue of freedom of _expression amid protests
    in the Muslim world, said, "Channeling people towards violence,
    terrorism and provoking terrorism can be prohibited by law.

    However, people should be left free to express what they think. I do
    not find France's act correct."

    4 EP president: Secular Turkey is no threat to EU

    The president of the European Parliament stated that a secular Turkey
    isn't a threat to the EU, referring to the French Parliament's passage
    of the Armenian bill, which he implied is an extension of the French
    desire for the issue to become a precondition for Turkey's membership.

    EP President Joseph Borrell, speaking to Italian daily La Stampa
    over the weekend, warned that the EU can't survive by supporting a
    single culture in today's world, and said, "Europe should get used
    to multiculturalism, because hundreds of thousands of immigrants move
    to Europe each year bringing their cultures with them."

    Speaking out against new conditions being brought before Turkey
    during its EU accession process, Borrell said, "There are criteria for
    incoming EU member states. Turkey will become a member by fulfilling
    them during a long and difficult period. The EU, for its part, will
    take in Turkey by making concessions on its geographical situation. And
    Turkey's membership will strengthen the EU politically and make the
    Union a multicultural power."

    5 The Observer: French past not spotless

    British daily The Observer commented on Sunday that making denial
    of an Armenian "genocide" a criminal offense is "wrong and bad,"
    describing the French move as an "enemy of free speech."

    The daily underlined that quite apart from limiting free speech, and
    therefore legitimizing a desirable debate on historical questions,
    the French are "surely obliged to remember more distinctly, and more
    publicly, the collaboration of so many of their own people with the
    Nazi transport of Jews before starting on the business of criminalizing
    remoter cases of denial."

    The Observer also stated that the Armenian bill was designed to
    complicate Turkey's application to join the EU.

    "It is a bewildering reality that France sees Turkey's refusal
    to acknowledge what happened to the Armenians as an obstacle to
    membership, while at the same time continuing to regard its own
    wartime behavior as somehow irreproachable," it was added.

    6 Armenian 'genocide' statue stolen from Paris suburb

    A statue commemorating an Armenian "genocide" has been stolen from
    a Paris suburb, local authorities said on Saturday.

    The event took place three days after French lawmakers approved the
    controversial bill that would make it a crime to question the Armenian
    genocide claims.

    The bronze monument, installed in front of the train station in the
    Paris suburb of Chaville in 2002, went missing between Friday night
    and Saturday morning, said the authorities of the Haut-de-Seine region.

    The police have not ruled out the possibility that the statue, which
    weighs several hundred kilograms, was stolen to be sold as scrap metal,
    said Stephane Topalian, who serves on the board of the local chapter
    of the Armenian church.

    However, Topalian stressed the timing of the robbery, which came just
    days after France's lower house of Parliament on Thursday passed a
    bill that would criminalize questioning the Armenian genocide claims.
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