Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

French Senate Passes Armenian Genocide Law

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • French Senate Passes Armenian Genocide Law

    FRENCH SENATE PASSES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE LAW

    BBC
    23 January 2012

    Thousands of people took to the streets of Paris on Saturday
    to demonstrate against the bill Continue reading the main story
    The French Senate has approved a controversial bill that makes it a
    criminal offence to deny that genocide was committed by Ottoman Turks
    against Armenians during World War I.

    Armenia says up to 1.5 million people died in 1915-16 as the Ottoman
    empire split. Turkey rejects the term genocide and says the number
    was much smaller.

    The measure will now be sent to President Sarkozy for final approval.

    The bill's passage in the lower house caused major tensions with
    Turkey.

    Ankara froze ties with France after the vote last month and promised
    further measures if the Senate backed the proposal.

    In the event the Senate approved the bill by 127 votes to 86.

    The BBC's correspondent in Istanbul, Jonathan Head, says stronger
    Turkish measures could include the withdrawal of ambassadors and
    creating more barriers to French businesses in Turkey.

    In the first reaction from Ankara, Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin
    condemned the bill.

    "The decision made by the Senate is a great injustice and shows total
    lack of respect for Turkey," he told the CNN-Turk television channel.

    The Turkish embassy in Paris warned that if President Sarkozy approved
    the bill, the damage done to relations between the two countries
    would be permanent.

    "France is in the process of losing a strategic partner," Turkish
    embassy spokesman, Engin Solakoglu, told AFP news agency.

    Armenia described the vote as "historic".

    "This day will be written in gold not only in the history of friendship
    between the Armenian and French peoples, but also in the annals of the
    history of the protection of human rights worldwide," said Armenian
    Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian, in a statement carried by AFP.

    Free speech

    The Turkish government argues that judging what happened to the
    Armenian community in eastern Turkey in 1915-16 should be left to
    historians, and that the French law will restrict freedom of speech.

    Analysis Jonathan Head

    BBC News, Istanbul

    President Sarkozy has sent a letter to the Turkish prime minister
    stating that the law is not aimed at any country, but only at
    addressing the past suffering of Armenians.

    Ironically, events in the Middle East had started to bring France
    and Turkey closer together: after initially squabbling over Libya,
    they have both become leading supporters of the Syrian opposition.

    But Turkish emotions over the Armenian issue run very high, and will
    certainly eclipse any co-operation they might have had over Syria.

    Turkish officials acknowledge that atrocities were committed but argue
    that there was no systematic attempt to destroy the Armenian people -
    and that many innocent Muslim Turks also died in the turmoil of the
    events, in the middle of World War I.

    France formally recognised the killings as genocide in 2001, one of
    more than 20 countries which have done so.

    The current bill means that anyone denying the deaths were genocide
    would face a jail term and a fine of 45,000 euros (£29,000; $58,000).

    The bill was put forward by President Sarkozy's UMP party.

    France has half a million citizens of Armenian descent, and
    correspondents say their votes may be important in this year's
    presidential elections.

    Ahead of the vote, a spokesman for the French foreign ministry called
    for "calm," saying Turkey was a partner and a very important ally
    of France.

Working...
X