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Turkish, French FMs discuss Turkey's EU bid, to host TARC

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  • Turkish, French FMs discuss Turkey's EU bid, to host TARC

    Xinhua General News Service, China
    November 18, 2011 Friday 1:15 AM EST



    Turkish, French FMs discuss Turkey's EU bid, to host Turkish- Armenian
    joint history commission

    ANKARA Nov. 18


    Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Friday that the
    European Union (EU) members, especially France, should consider
    Turkey's EU bid with a new vision.

    Davutoglu made the remarks at a joint press conference with visiting
    French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe in the Turkish capital of Ankara,
    saying that the recent economic crisis showed once again the
    importance of Turkey's contribution to the EU.

    As one of the founding countries of the EU, France's assessment of
    Turkey would bring a momentum to EU-Turkish relations, Davutoglu said.

    On his part, Juppe said that France was not against Turkey's EU
    membership, but a solution was needed in regard to Cyprus issue.

    There were sound relations between Turkey and France, Juppe said,
    adding that Turkey is set to take over the rotating presidency of the
    Group of Twenty in 2015 and this would confirm Turkey's importance in
    the international platform.

    France supported Turkey in its fight against terrorism, the French
    foreign minister said, noting that France would do its best in
    combating the outlawed Kurdish Workers' Party (PKK) and nearly 100
    suspects were arrested in France since 2010.

    Meanwhile, Davutoglu said that Turkey had accepted Juppe's call for
    establishment of a joint history commission to investigate the deaths
    of Armenians in 1915.

    Armenians claim that more than 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a
    systematic genocide during World War I, but the Turkish government
    insists that the Armenians were victims of widespread chaos and
    governmental breakdown as the Ottoman empire collapsed before modern
    Turkey was created in 1923.

    "We are ready to discuss our own history and other countries' history
    in an atmosphere of mutual respect and freedom," he said.

    However, Turkey was against laws and resolutions that would make its
    self-defense impossible, Davutoglu said, adding that there was such a
    resolution at the French Senate today.

    "Implementation of this resolution is against French intellectual
    tradition and freedom of thought," Davutoglu said.

    Davutoglu noted that Turkey would welcome any initiative from France
    regarding the establishment of a joint history commission between
    Turkey and Armenia, hoping that it would contribute to
    Turkish-Armenian rapprochement and normalization of relations.

    In 2005, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan sent a letter to
    the then Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and proposed to establish
    a joint commission of historians to study the deaths of Armenians in
    1915.

    Turkey and Armenia have neither diplomatic nor economic ties since
    Armenia declared independence in 1991. The two sides signed protocols
    to normalize relations and open borders last year, but the pacts need
    to be approved by both countries' parliaments before taking effect.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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