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  • Turkey pressures France to stop Armenian genocide bill

    EurActiv
    Jan 6 2012


    Turkey pressures France to stop Armenian genocide bill

    As the French Senate rushes to consider a bill that would penalise
    denial of the massacre of over 1 million Armenians by the Ottoman
    Empire, Turkey is lobbying to stop the effort, warning of economic
    consequences.
    The Senate is set to vote by the end of January on a bill that would
    make it illegal to deny that the 1915 mass killing of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks amounted to genocide, Turkish and French news media
    reported yesterday (4 January), quoting parliamentary and government
    sources.

    The French National Assembly voted in favour last month of a bill that
    would penalise denial of the Armenian massacre by a maximum one-year
    prison sentence and a ?¬45,000 fine. The punishment would be on par
    with denial of the Holocaust.

    This led Ankara to cancel all economic, political and military
    meetings with Paris and to recall its ambassador for consultations.
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an hit back at France,
    denouncing 45,000 Algerian deaths in 1945, at that time under French
    rule, as well as the alleged role of France in the massacre of 800,000
    people in Rwanda in 1994.

    Turkey rejects qualifying the killings as "genocide" in the same
    category as the Jewish Holocaust. Ankara also says the Turkish
    republic founded in 1922 shouldn't be held responsible for actions of
    Ottoman rulers, and inisists that the issue should be left to
    historians.

    Supporters of the bill want to see the legislation approved before
    parliament adjourns at the end of February ahead of presidential
    elections in April and May.

    Final hearings

    In the meantime, Turkey indicated that it would use the time available
    to lobby against the legislation, the daily Zaman reported. The
    Turkish ambassador to France is expected to return in Paris anytime
    soon, and is to attend hearings on the bill in the Senate.

    Legal experts, officials from Turkish and Armenian groups and the
    Turkish and Armenian ambassadors to Paris are also expected to be
    present.

    Despite earlier angry calls for a boycott of French goods, Finance
    Minister Mehmet Å?imÅ?ek said Ankara would not launch a pressure
    campaign.

    But Many Turks reportedly said they would not buy French goods, and a
    businessman reportedly set up a ?¬1-million fund from which fines for
    genocide denial would be paid.

    Turkish economic experts say the genocide legislation could be
    detrimental for the French economic interest in Turkey, mainly for the
    public contracts. Turkey's adoption of the EU's environmental policies
    is opening huge market opportunities for the French companies.
    Together with other opportunities in energy, transport, defence and
    aviation, almost ?¬100 billion worth of market activity is now becoming
    difficult to access for the French companies because the country's
    image and credibility in Turkey are getting negative, a Turkish expert
    told EurActiv.

    Positions:
    Bahadir Kaleagasi, president of the Paris-based Bosphorus Institute,
    told EurActiv that he saw a link between the push by "some French
    politicians" for the bill, and the presidential elections in April and
    May.

    "It is interesting to observe that a great majority of the French
    media and public are against this move that they judge as a political
    manipulation harming the freedom of expression and the democratic
    credentials of France."

    Kaleagasi said the Armenia massacres could not be put into the same
    basket as the genocide of the Jews.

    "This [bill] criminalises the ongoing historical research and opening
    of the archives of all the countries involved in the First World War
    to enlighten all aspects of the ethnic violence and human tragedies of
    the same era. This project of the bill undermines also Turkey's
    current public debate for a better reconciliation with the history and
    Armenia. France could have played a constructive role in this process.
    Moreover, the French attitude is perceived by the Turkish population
    as hostile. It is really pity, because there were no tangible
    conflicts between two countries which have great joint interests in an
    increasingly challenging global economic and political context,"
    Kalegasi said.

    "The so-called Armenian genocide problems" cannot be resolved by a
    vote in the French Parliament, Ramazan Gözen from the Abant İzzet
    Baysal University argues in a commentary published by the daily Zaman.

    "If the aim of the French National Assembly is to politically isolate
    Turkey, tear it away from the EU and put pressure on its foreign
    policy - if there is such a deep scheme behind all that manoeuvring -
    the country to be harmed the most is firstly France. The signals of
    that have already been seen in the international media. The world
    media have come up with views that France's move will draw reactions
    from almost all countries, Turkey in particular," Gözen writes.

    Turkey has fallen in Sarkozy's trap, writes Etyen Mahçupyan, chief
    editor of the Armenian daily Agos, in a commentary published by the
    French website Mediapart.

    According to Mahçupyan, the French president aims at provoking the
    authorities in Ankara to a response out of proportion, which would
    ultimately dishonour Turkey.

    The author advises that instead of overreacting, Turkey should show
    France that its stands on higher ground. The Turkish prime minister
    could even make a statement and offer French tourists discount prices,
    he writes.

    EurActiv.com

    http://www.euractiv.com/enlargement/turkey-pressures-france-armenian-genocide-bill-news-509994




    From: A. Papazian
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