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Turkey Calls On France To Abandon Genocide Law

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  • Turkey Calls On France To Abandon Genocide Law

    TURKEY CALLS ON FRANCE TO ABANDON GENOCIDE LAW

    eTaiwan News
    http://www.taiwannews.com.tw/etn/news_content.php?id=1793132
    Dec 20 2011

    Turkey's president on Tuesday called on France to abandon a draft
    bill that would punish anyone denying that the World War II-era mass
    killings of Armenians was genocide, further souring relations between
    the two countries.

    The lower house of the French Parliament will debate Thursday whether
    to criminalize the denial that the killings by Ottoman Turks more
    than 90 years ago amounted to genocide with a punishment of one
    year in prison and a (EURO)45,000 ($59,000) fine. That would bring
    legislation in line with how France treats denial of the Holocaust.

    France's foreign minister reminded a delegation of visiting Turkish
    parliamentarians late Tuesday of President Nicolas Sarkozy's call
    in October for Turkey to "make a gesture of memory" and recognize
    its history, just as France has done by recognizing the role of the
    French state in the Nazi deportation of Jews during World War II.

    Alain Juppe said he is convinced that ties and strategic interests
    between Paris and Ankara "are sufficiently strong to overcome
    challenges," a ministry statement said.

    Turkey vehemently rejects the term genocide. It insists the deaths
    occurred during civil unrest as the Ottoman Empire collapsed and
    that there were losses on both sides. It has threatened to withdraw
    its ambassador to France if the bill is passed and warned of "grave
    consequences" to economic and political ties.

    President Abdullah Gul issued a strong statement Tuesday appealing
    to France to drop the draft law from its "agenda."

    "It is impossible for us to accept a draft law directed toward
    eliminating the freedom to reject unjust and groundless accusations
    against our country and our people," the Turkish president said.

    "I hope that France will soon abandon the initiative which will put
    France in a position of a country that does not respect freedom of
    expression and does not allow objective scientific research," he said.

    Gul said it was "strange and thought-provoking" that the law comes
    ahead of next year's presidential elections in France, suggesting that
    the move was aimed at winning the votes of Armenian-French citizens.

    "I want to hope that France will not sacrifice the Turkish-French
    friendship which goes back hundreds of years, its common interests
    and alliance for petty political calculations," he added.

    The genocide bill threatens to further strain Turkish-French relations
    already tense over Sarkozy's opposition to Turkey's bid to join the
    European Union.

    Signs of the tensions were evident Tuesday: Gul's media adviser,
    Ahmet Sever, told The Associated Press that the Turkish president
    decided to issue the statement after Sarkozy failed to take his calls.

    "We tried (to reach Sarkozy) for the past three days, but his aides
    gave excuses to string us along," Sever said. "He (Sarkozy) shied
    away from talking to us."

    No one was immediately available for comment at the French president's
    office.

    In October, Sarkozy traveled to Armenia and urged Turkey to recognize
    the 1915 killings as genocide, hinting then that failure to do so
    could force France to change its law and make such denials a criminal
    offense.

    "Turkey, which is a great country, would honor itself by revisiting
    its history like other countries in the world have done," Sarkozy
    said during his visit to the Armenian capital, Yerevan.

    France went into damage control on Tuesday, ahead of a meeting between
    Juppe and the Turkish parliamentary delegation, headed by the head
    of the foreign affairs commission, Volkan Bozkir, visiting France to
    lobby French legislators against the bill.

    Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said France wanted to stress
    to the visitors that the proposal to be debated Thursday by lawmakers
    is a "parliamentary initiative," a way of distancing Sarkozy and the
    government from the measure.

    Earlier, government spokeswoman Valerie Pecresse did likewise,
    stressing that the draft bill does not simply target the Armenian
    genocide. The text is "very broad in a way that it can apply to all
    genocide recognized by France in the future," she said, noting that
    it also covers slavery.

    Both she and the Foreign Ministry stressed the importance of ties
    between Paris and Ankara, from their common strategic interests in
    reaching peace in Syria">Syria and Afghanistan to their roles as NATO
    members and bilateral ties.

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed
    during the massacre, with experts saying it was the first genocide
    of the 20th century.

    The bill would make it a crime to deny any genocide, war crime or
    crime against humanity recognized as such by French laws, and put
    Armenian genocide denial on a par with Holocaust denial, which was
    banned in the country in 1990.

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