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Over Turkish Protests, French Lawmakers To Vote On Bill Penalizing G

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  • Over Turkish Protests, French Lawmakers To Vote On Bill Penalizing G

    OVER TURKISH PROTESTS, FRENCH LAWMAKERS TO VOTE ON BILL PENALIZING GENOCIDE DENIAL
    By STEVEN ERLANGER and SOPHIE COHEN

    The New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/23/world/europe/over-turkey-protests-france-to-vote-on-genocide-denial-bill.html
    Jan 23 2012

    PARIS - The French Senate is scheduled to vote on Monday on a law
    that would penalize those who deny genocide, taking another step
    along a path that has already damaged France's relations with Turkey.

    The draft law, passed in December by the National Assembly, France's
    lower house, does not specifically mention the mass killings of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915. But those killings were formally
    labeled genocide by the French Parliament in 2001, leading to an
    angry reaction from the Turkish government, which insists that
    there was no deliberate campaign to massacre the Armenians. About
    1.5 million Armenians are estimated to have died from shootings,
    exposure and starvation.

    The Turkish foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, said Friday at a news
    conference in Ankara, Turkey, that the law, if passed, would "remain
    as a black stain in France's intellectual history, and we will always
    remind them of this black stain." He asked the senators to reject it.

    In a letter last week to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey,
    President Nicolas Sarkozy of France insisted that the bill was in
    "no way aimed at any state or people in particular." Mr. Sarkozy urged
    "reason and dialogue" with Turkey on the issue.

    Still, the only other mass killing legally recognized in France as
    genocide is the Holocaust, and it is already a crime here to deny
    the Holocaust.

    After the December vote, Turkey's ambassador to France, Tahsin
    Burcuoglu, was briefly recalled to Ankara. Turkey also suspended
    military cooperation and bilateral political and economic contracts
    with France. Mr. Erdogan accused Mr. Sarkozy of playing politics and
    fanning Islamophobia.

    The law is the initiative of Valerie Boyer, a legislator from Mr.

    Sarkozy's governing party. Ms. Boyer, who is from Marseille, a city
    with a sizable Armenian constituency, denies playing politics.

    "Genocide is a universal problem," she said in an interview. "It is
    something that is over and above politics."

    But her draft law has annoyed the Sarkozy government, especially the
    Foreign Ministry, at a time when France wants Turkish cooperation
    on issues including the Arab Spring, Syrian unrest and the Iranian
    nuclear program. France's foreign minister, Alain Juppe, said in
    December that the vote on the genocide law had "without doubt been
    badly timed." He said that "it is important, in the current context,
    that we keep the paths of dialogue and cooperation open."

    The bill may not pass the Senate, which is controlled by the
    opposition Socialist Party and its allies. On Wednesday, a Senate
    committee suggested that the bill could be unconstitutional. Ms. Boyer
    criticized the Socialists, saying there had been a consensus on the
    bill, "right as well as left."

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry applauded the committee's suggestion,
    saying in a statement that the Senate had shown "common sense and
    respect for the law."

    France's Armenian population, about 500,000 strong, generally praised
    the bill. After a Sunday service filled with French Armenians of all
    ages at the Sainte-Croix-de-Paris Cathedral here, the Rev. Georges
    Assadourian said he was overjoyed. "My great-grandparents were
    massacred in 1915," he said. "The truth cannot be denied."

    Alexis Govciyan, director of the Coordinating Council of Armenian
    Organizations of France, praised the effort to recognize victims
    of genocide. "France and Armenia have enjoyed close relations for
    a thousand years," he said. "That the French wish to pass this law
    shows that they understand Armenian history very well, precisely
    because of this friendship."

    The 400,000 people in France's Turkish community, by contrast, are
    angry. Balci Saahip, a costume designer from Izmir, speaking at a
    Turkish cafe in the 10th Arrondissement in Paris, said he was furious
    about the "electoral manipulation" of history by Mr. Sarkozy's party.

    "We have had enough of people walking all over us," said Mr. Saahip,
    who has lived here for 34 years. While eligible for French citizenship,
    he never finished his application because, he said, the reception he
    got from the French authorities was "very hostile."

    At an independent Turkish cultural center she runs nearby, Francoise
    Onger said that her husband, a Turkish cardiologist, is often mistaken
    for an Armenian or a Jew. "No one can believe that a Turk can have
    such a good job," she said.

    Kader Kandemir, 26, is a second-generation Turk in France. Her exposure
    to Western historiography has led her to question what really happened
    in 1915. But she said she would be joining other French Turks from
    all over the country in Paris this weekend to demonstrate against
    Monday's Senate vote.

    "I'm not saying a genocide didn't take place," she said. "I'm saying
    that I don't know whether it did or not, and I shouldn't have to be
    punished for wanting to find out that answer myself."

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