Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Sarkozy Tries To Clarify "Armenia Threat"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Sarkozy Tries To Clarify "Armenia Threat"

    SARKOZY TRIES TO CLARIFY "ARMENIA THREAT"

    www.worldbulletin.net, Turkey
    Oct 14 2011

    Sarkozy had said France could pass a law, similar to that in
    Switzerland, which would support Armenian allegations regarding the
    incidents of 1915.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy tried to make up to Turkey by his
    advisor Jean David Levitte after his recent remarks on the incidents
    of 1915 in a visit to Yereven caused great uproar in Turkey, Anadolu
    news agency reported on Friday.

    Sarkozy had said France could pass a law, similar to that in
    Switzerland, which would support Armenian allegations regarding the
    incidents of 1915.

    Sarkozy, on a brief trip to the Caucasus, urged Turkey to recognize
    the 1915 killings of Armenians as "genocide", threatening to pass a law
    in France that would make having different views on the controversial
    matter "a crime".

    Following Sarkozy's visit to Yerevan, Levitte invited Turkish
    Ambassador in Paris Tahsin Burcuoglu to the Elysee Palace by phone.

    Diplomatic sources told the AA on Friday that in their meeting Levitte
    informed Burcuoglu that Sarkozy's remarks were "misunderstood" and
    that France did not want to hurt relations with Turkey.

    France considers Turkey as a great country and we pay high attention
    to Turkey's friendship, Levitte told Burcuoglu.

    Ambassador Burcuoglu once more reiterated Turkey's sensitivity on the
    matter and told Levitte that a new legislation on the incidents of 1915
    at the French Parliament would severely hurt Turkish-French relations.

    The French media ran news reports that Sarkozy's comments made in
    Yerevan were uttered due to domestic politics in France.

    Turkey rejects the term and denies that up to 1.5 million Armenians
    died. It says many Muslim Turks and Kurds, as well as Christian
    Armenians, were killed in inter-communal violence as Russian forces
    invaded eastern Anatolia during World War One.

Working...
X