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ISTANBUL: Politician Confident Of French Bill's Approval

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  • ISTANBUL: Politician Confident Of French Bill's Approval

    POLITICIAN CONFIDENT OF FRENCH BILL'S APPROVAL
    Vercihan Ziflioglu

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Feb 1 2012
    Turkey

    Yalick expresses confidence the bill would be approved.

    Amid a growing rift between France and Turkey over a recently passed
    bill to criminalize the denial of Armenian genocide claims, French
    deputy Valeri Boyer's advisor Garo Yalick expressed his full confidence
    the draft law would be approved.

    "I have full confidence that this law is going to be approved under
    any circumstances," Yalick, a Turkish-born advisor of Armenian origin
    to Marseilles deputy Boyer, told the Hurriyet Daily News.

    Sixty-five deputies and 60 senators in France have appealed to the
    country's Constitutional Council to overturn the bill that was drafted
    and presented to the French Parliament by Boyer of the ruling Union
    for a Popular Movement (UMP) party.

    "They are exercising their democratic rights in relation to the [draft]
    law, but let there be no misunderstandings in Turkey. The deputies and
    the senators who oppose the law are also in agreement that genocide
    was committed against Armenians in 1915. It ought to be remembered
    that France officially recognized the genocide in 2001," Yalick said.

    They are trying to blow this law out of all proportion in some quarters
    in Turkey, he said, adding that President Nicolas Sarkozy's leading
    rival Francois Hollande had also lent his support to the bill.

    "President Sarkozy was accused of political maneuvering prior to
    the elections. It ought not be forgotten that one of Sarkozy's most
    potent rivals Hollande also backed the bill. There was no distinction
    between the left and the right, as everyone in France is in agreement
    over the definition of the events of 1915," he said.

    Galick further claimed the annulment of the bill by the Constitutional
    Council would also amount to the rejection of four other laws.

    "In case this law is annulled [by the court] the Jewish Holocaust
    Law is also going to turn null and void. This is a law construed upon
    the norms of the European Union [EU]," Yalick said.

    It was a futile effort to discuss whether the bill would be annulled
    as it was not a new law but rather filled a legal gap, he said.

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