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French Turks Protest Ahead Of "Genocide Bill" Debate

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  • French Turks Protest Ahead Of "Genocide Bill" Debate

    FRENCH TURKS PROTEST AHEAD OF "GENOCIDE BILL" DEBATE

    Chicago Tribune
    Dec 22 2011

    PARIS (Reuters) - Several thousand Franco-Turks demonstrated in
    central Paris Thursday ahead of a parliamentary vote on a bill that
    would make it a crime to deny the 1915 mass killing of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks was genocide.

    Tension has risen between Paris and Ankara in the last week over the
    draft law put forward by members of President Nicolas Sarkozy's party
    that will be put to a vote around lunchtime.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan wrote a letter to Sarkozy last
    week warning political and economic relations would suffer grave
    consequences if the bill is passed.

    "I don't understand why France wants to censor my freedom of
    expression," Yildiz Hamza, president of the Montargis association
    that represents 700 Turkish families in France told Reuters outside
    the National Assembly. "Every five years there is this sort of debate
    because elections are approaching."

    When the debate began, public benches were filled with Turks and
    Armenians. Police strengthened their presence inside the chamber to
    head off any possible disorders.

    Armenia, backed by many historians and parliaments, says about 1.5
    million Christian Armenians were killed in what is now eastern Turkey
    during World War One in a deliberate policy of genocide ordered by
    the Ottoman government.

    Successive Turkish governments and the vast majority of Turks feel the
    charge of genocide is a direct insult to their nation. Ankara argues
    that there was heavy loss of life on both sides during fighting in
    the area.

    Ankara sees the bill, proposed by 40 deputies from Sarkozy's party,
    is a blatant attempt at winning the votes of 500,000 ethnic Armenians
    in France in next year's elections, limits freedom of speech and
    is an unnecessary meddling by politicians in a business best left
    to historians.

    Police said about 3,000 demonstrators were already on site with as
    many as 10,000 expected during the day, which also marks 32 years
    since a Turkish diplomat was assassinated by Armenian militants in
    central Paris.

    Faced with Sarkozy's open hostility to Turkey's all-but stagnant bid
    to join the European Union, and buoyed by a fast-growing economy,
    Ankara has little to lose by picking a political fight with Paris.

    With Turkey taking an increasingly pivotal and influential role in
    the Middle East, especially over Syria, Iran and Libya, France could
    experience some diplomatic discomfort, and French firms could lose
    out on lucrative Turkish contracts.

    "Turkey is a democracy and has joined the World Trade Organization so
    it can't just discriminate for political reasons against countries,"
    Europe Minister Jean Leonetti told France Inter radio. "I think
    these threats are just hot wind and we (have) to begin a much more
    reasoned dialogue."

    The French government has stressed that the bill, which mandates a
    45,000-euro fine and a year in jail for offenders, is not its own
    initiative and pointed out that Turkey cannot impose unilateral
    trade sanctions.

    France passed a law recognizing the killing of Armenians as genocide
    in 2001, Turkey was in the midst of an economic crisis, and reacted
    in a similar vein, but figures show trade between the two countries
    nevertheless grew steadily.

    The French lower house of parliament first passed a bill criminalizing
    the denial of an Armenian genocide in 2006, but it was finally rejected
    by the Senate in May of this year.

    The new bill was made more general to outlaw the denial of any
    genocide, partly in the hope of appeasing the Turks. While it is very
    likely to be approved by the lower house, it could also face a long
    passage into law, though its backers want to see it completed before
    parliament is suspended at the end of February.

    (Reporting By John Irish)

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