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French Senate Debates Armenian 'genocide' Denial Bill As Turkey Warn

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  • French Senate Debates Armenian 'genocide' Denial Bill As Turkey Warn

    FRENCH SENATE DEBATES ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE' DENIAL BILL AS TURKEY WARNS OF REPRISALS

    Washington Post
    Jan 23 2012

    By Associated Press, PARIS - Turkey threatened more sanctions for
    France if the Senate in Paris votes later Monday to make it a crime to
    deny the 20th-century killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks constitutes
    a genocide.

    France's lower house voted to make such denials a crime last month,
    prompting Turkey to suspended military, economic and political ties.

    If the bill passes the Senate, it will be on a fast track to becoming
    law. If it fails, the National Assembly, France's lower house, could
    take it up again, starting the process over.

    As the debate before the vote got under way, rival demonstrations -
    one pro-Turkish and one pro-Armenian, kept apart by a large police
    presence - gathered outside the upper house of parliament, waving
    flags and blowing whistles.

    On Saturday, thousands of Turks from across Europe marched through
    the French capital, accusing French President Nicolas Sarkozy of
    acting in the hope of securing French Armenians' votes in this year's
    presidential elections.

    An estimated 500,000 Armenians live in France.

    While most historians contend that the 1915 killings of 1.5 million
    Armenians as the Ottoman Empire broke up was the 20th century's first
    genocide, Turkey has vigorously denied that. It says that there was
    no systematic campaign to kill Armenians and that many Turks also
    died during the chaotic disintegration of the empire.

    On Monday, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc, speaking during
    a visit to Strasbourg, France, said: "What would happen if a thousand,
    ten thousand or a hundred thousand gathered around Eiffel and said
    'there is no genocide'? What would the French justice do? Would it
    be able to convict ten thousand or a hundred thousand people? I don't
    think so."

    But the most significant protest came from Ankara, Turkey's capital,
    where the foreign minister warned that he was ready to take new
    measures against France if the bill passed.

    "Turkey will continue to implement sanctions as long as this bill
    remains in motion," Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told
    reporters ahead of the debate. "We hope however, that this won't be
    necessary and that common sense will reign in the French Senate."

    He did not spell out the measures Turkey would take.

    The bill sets a punishment of up to one year in prison and a fine
    of ~@45,000 ($59,000) for those who deny or "outrageously minimize"
    the killings - putting such action on par with denial of the Holocaust.

    France formally recognized the 1915 killings as genocide in 2001,
    but provided no penalty for anyone rejecting that.

    The bill strikes at the heart of national honor in Turkey, which has
    argued that the bill would compromise freedom of expression in France.

    "European values are under threat," Davutoglu said Monday. "If each
    parliament takes decisions containing its own views of history and
    implements them, a new era of Inquisition will be opened in Europe."

    "Those who voice views that exclude this view of history will be
    jailed," he said. "It would unfortunately, be a great shame for France
    to revive this."


    From: Baghdasarian
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