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ANKARA: Sarkozy To Re-Draft Genocide Bill If Rejected: Ministers

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  • ANKARA: Sarkozy To Re-Draft Genocide Bill If Rejected: Ministers

    SARKOZY TO RE-DRAFT GENOCIDE BILL IF REJECTED: MINISTERS

    Cumhuriyet
    Feb 1 2012
    Turkey

    President Nicolas Sarkozy will immediately submit a new draft of a
    law punishing denial of the Armenian genocide if France's top judicial
    body rejects it, two ministers told AFP Wednesday.

    PARIS- "The president told us in cabinet that he would immediately
    submit a new draft if there is a rejection by the Constitutional
    Council" of a bill approved recently by the French parliament, said
    one of the ministers, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Another minister said Sarkozy had also criticised those in cabinet
    who had opposed the bill, saying they "did not see past the ends of
    their noses". He said a rejection of the bill by the Constitutional
    Council could open the door to questioning a law that penalises denial
    of the Holocaust.

    After being approved by the National Assembly and Senate, the law
    was put on hold Tuesday after politicians opposed to the legislation
    demanded that its constitutionality be examined.

    Two separate groups of French politicians who oppose the legislation
    -- from both the Senate and the lower house -- said they had formally
    requested the Constitutional Council examine the law.

    The groups said they each had gathered more than the minimum
    60 signatures required to ask the council to test the law's
    constitutionality.

    The council is obliged to deliver its judgement within a month,
    but this can be reduced to eight days if the government deems the
    matter urgent.

    Turkey reacted furiously last week when the Senate approved the law,
    which threatens with jail anyone in France who denies that the 1915
    massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turk forces amounted to genocide.

    Ankara has already halted political and military cooperation with
    France and was threatening to cut off economic and cultural ties if
    the law took effect.

    Despite government backing of the law, at least two ministers,
    Foreign Minister Alain Juppe and Agriculture Minister Bruno Le Maire,
    had spoken out against the bill.

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