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Will France Make It Illegal To Deny Turkey's Armenian Genocide?

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  • Will France Make It Illegal To Deny Turkey's Armenian Genocide?

    WILL FRANCE MAKE IT ILLEGAL TO DENY TURKEY'S ARMENIAN GENOCIDE?

    San Francisco Chronicle, CA
    Oct 18 2006

    History, some historians point out, is written by the victors. Are
    there times, though, when history is written by legislators?

    Last Thursday, deputies in the lower house of France's National
    Assembly approved a bill that would make it a crime to deny that
    mass killings by the Ottoman Empire (modern Turkey's predecessor)
    of Armenians between 1915 and 1917 constituted what can be called
    genocide; Armenians claim the mass killings and deportations of
    ethnic Armenians during that period, which Turkey has long refuted,
    was genocide that led to more than 1.5 million deaths.(Le Monde)

    Bulent Kilic/AFP

    Protesters in Istanbul last weekend expressed their anger at the news
    of the proposed French law If the French Senate approves the proposal,
    and it becomes a national law, then anyone in France who denies "the
    Armenian genocide" could be punished with a year in prison and up to
    45,000 euros ($56,000) in fines. In 2001, France's National Assembly
    already officially recognized the Ottoman Turks' massacres of the
    Armenians nearly a century ago as genocide.

    France's action has sparked furor across the political spectrum in
    Turkey. French President Jacques Chirac called Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan to say he regretted it. (Still, just a little
    more than two weeks ago, in Armenia, Chirac publicly stated that it
    would be an "inspired" gesture for Turkey to finally recognize the
    Ottoman Turks' genocide against the Armenians - that is, if Turkey
    has any hope of ever joining the European Union.) (Le Monde)

    Erdogan later said: "Chirac called me to say he was disappointed...."

    The Turkish leader called the proposed French law a "great shame and
    a black stain for freedom of expression." Turkish Foreign Minister
    Abdullah Gul warned that the bill that is moving through France's
    legislature could "deeply damage French-Turkish relations."

    Hurriyet

    Bulent Arinc, the speaker of Turkey's parliament Turkey's Hurriyet
    reports that Bulent Arinc, the speaker of the Turkish parliament, "said
    that he does not think...Chirac's apologetic phone call to...Erdogan in
    the wake of the French parliament's acceptance of the 'genocide-denial'
    bill was 'genuine.'"

    Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja, whose country currently
    holds the E.U.'s rotating presidency, called the French deputies'
    action "stupid." Qualifying his remark, he stated: "My calling this
    French decision 'stupid,' and my hope that the bill is immediately
    withdrawn ha[ve] nothing to do with [what] actually happened to the
    Armenians in Turkey. Personally, I do think that 'genocide' is the
    correct term to describe what happened to Armenians in the past,
    and I wish that Turkey would be ready to accept this." (Hurriyet)

    Fatih Saribas/Reuters

    The protest in Istanbul brought out supporters of parties across the
    political spectrum, all furious about France's action Commentator Ayse
    Ozgun, in the Turkish Daily News, writes: "[T]he Armenian subjects of
    the Ottoman Empire were first coaxed by the Russians...to rise up and
    fight [their rulers]...allowing them to build their own country....In
    the end, however, the Ottomans won, and Armenian independence was
    never realized....I can imagine how such a loss could plant extreme
    anger in the French towards the Ottomans and, later, the Turks....But
    then I ask the French...: How come you did not support the Armenians
    with French troops?...The test of time for friendship is not when
    the days are sunny and balmy but when they are bloody and tragic."

    An editorial in the Paris-based International Herald Tribune (the
    New York Times' sister publication) states: "We have argued many
    times that Turkey must come to grips with the crimes of its past
    and stop prosecuting writers who mention the Armenian genocide of
    the early 20th century. But we found it as absurd and as cynical
    when the French National Assembly voted overwhelmingly last week to
    make it illegal...to deny that there was an Armenian genocide." The
    IHT advises: "France's Senate still has a chance to throw out this
    outrageous bill, and we hope it does. We hope, too, that the Turks do
    not retaliate with something similarly nutty, like making it a crime
    to deny French colonial atrocities in Algeria....[T]he sooner Turks
    confront their past, the better. They are beginning to, in large part
    because of the lure of membership in the European Union. That does not
    excuse the way French politicians are trying to exploit anti-Turkish
    feelings while playing up to the large Armenian-French constituency."
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