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CNN: How Will Armenian Genocide Bill Affect France-Turkey Relations?

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  • CNN: How Will Armenian Genocide Bill Affect France-Turkey Relations?

    HOW WILL ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL AFFECT FRANCE-TURKEY RELATIONS?

    CNN
    http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/23/world/europe/turkey-france-genocide-bill-q-and-a/index.html
    Jan 23 2012

    (CNN) -- Turkey's fraught relationship with France is set to erode
    further as the French Senate prepares to vote on controversial
    legislation that would criminalize any public denial of what the bill
    calls the Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey in 1915 -- a description
    Turkey has rejected.

    Under the legislation, anyone denying the deaths were genocide would
    face a jail term and a fine of ~@45,000 ($58,000).

    The lower house of French parliament passed the so-called Armenian
    genocide bill last December, prompting Turkey to recall its ambassador
    from Paris and to cancel certain bilateral visits between the
    countries.

    What do Armenians say allegedly happened in 1915?

    Armenian groups and many scholars argue that starting in 1915, Turks
    committed genocide, when more than a million ethnic Armenians were
    massacred in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire.

    The Turkish-Armenian controversy over the killings that took place last
    century has reverberated wherever diaspora communities representing
    both groups exist.

    What does Turkey say happened in 1915?

    Modern-day Turkey, which emerged after the collapse of the Ottoman
    Empire, has always denied a genocide took place in 1915. It argues
    instead that hundreds of thousands of Armenian Christians and Muslim
    Turks died from intercommunal violence, disease and general chaos --
    not from a specific plan to eliminate Armenians -- around the bloody
    battlefields of World War I.

    "It has always been a sensitive issue," said Dr. Katerina Dalacoura, a
    lecturer in International Relations at the London School of Economics.

    "Turkey has always refused to accept that it was a planned event. They
    argue that genocide only applies if it was a plan to exterminate
    people."

    Why is France doing this now?

    France formally recognized the killings as genocide in 2001.

    As there is no new information or new recognition about what the
    facts are about events of 1915, some experts believe French President
    Nicolas Sarkozy may be using the genocide bill for political gain
    ahead of the country's presidential election in April.

    "It's clear that President Sarkozy has put this on the table for
    electoral reasons - there is an Armenian community in France which
    will of course be voting," Christian Malard, Senior Foreign Analyst
    at France 3 TV, told CNN on Monday.

    The bill has been applauded by Armenians, roughly 500,000 of whom
    live in France.

    The bill's author, Valeri Bouyer from Sarkozy's ruling party, has
    denied any political motivation.

    As for Sarkozy, he has said his country doesn't need an OK from another
    nation to develop its policies. In a letter to the Turkish government,
    he said the law is not aimed at any country, but only at addressing
    past suffering.

    What is the public opinion in Turkey regarding the Armenian massacre?

    Using the word genocide when talking about Armenia may not be as taboo
    as it once was, but Turks still chafe at the idea of other countries
    writing their history, says Fadi Hakura, Turkey Analyst at Chatham
    House, a London-based think tank.

    "Things have been progressing, but the population does not like
    foreign powers defining their history," he said. "It generates a lot
    of misgivings."

    How would passage of the genocide bill affect Turkey-France relations?

    If the French Senate ratifies the bill, ties between the two countries
    could unravel further.

    Turkey already recalled its ambassador from Paris and cancelled some
    bilateral visits between the two countries after the French lower
    house passed the bill in December, and Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan warned "this is only the first phase."

    Erdogan has also accused France of committing its own genocide during
    the war in Algeria in the 1950s and 1960s.

    "In Algeria, an estimated 15 percent of the population had been
    subjected to the massacre of French from 1945 on. This is genocide,"
    Erdogan said at a conference in Istanbul last year.

    "Algerians were burnt en masse in ovens. They were martyred
    mercilessly. If French President Mr. (Nicolas) Sarkozy does not know
    about this genocide, he should ask his father Paul Sarkozy. His
    father Paul Sarkozy served as a soldier in the French legion in
    Algeria in 1940s."

    Once under French colonial rule, guerrillas in the North African
    nation fought a bloody war against the French presence there from
    1954 to 1962.

    The French Foreign Ministry shot back at Erdogan's comments, saying
    "we deplore excessive use of formulas and personal attacks that do not
    meet up to the standards of our mutual interest and of our relations.

    France recalls that it assumes with clarity and transparency its duty
    to remember the tragedies that have marked its history."

    Erdogan said he hoped the Senate would fail to pass the so-called
    Armenian genocide bill. But he warned that if it did, Turkey would
    initiate more measures toward France.

    "This will create a lot of noise and difficulty in Turkey's overall
    relationships with France and other EU states that will complicate"
    Turkey's efforts to gain accession to the European Union, said Ross
    Wilson, a former U.S. ambassador to Turkey.

    Turkey and France are NATO allies, and, according to official Turkish
    statistics, the volume of trade between Turkey and France from January
    to the end of October this year was more than $13.5 billion.

    Do any countries recognize the killing of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey
    in 1915 as genocide?

    Twenty countries do, including Germany, Sweden and Canada, according
    to Hakura.

    The genocide debate is an annual source of tension between Turkey and
    the United States, also two NATO allies. The White House, for example,
    annually beats back efforts in Congress to pass a resolution which
    would formally recognize the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide.

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