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Turkey Threatens 'Total Rupture' With France Over Armenian Genocide

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  • Turkey Threatens 'Total Rupture' With France Over Armenian Genocide

    TURKEY THREATENS 'TOTAL RUPTURE' WITH FRANCE OVER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL

    Deutsche Welle
    http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,15686187,00.html
    Jan 24 2012
    Germany

    Turkey has strongly condemned the French Senate's approval of a bill
    that would outlaw denying mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    was genocide. Ankara's ambassador in Paris says he's ready to pack
    his bags.

    France's upper house approved a bill late on Monday making it illegal
    to deny that a massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World
    War I was genocide, sparking ire from Turkey and praise from Armenia.

    The Senate passed the bill - which allows for a potential one-year
    prison sentence and a fine of up to 45,000 euros ($57,000) for those
    who deny that genocide took place - by a vote of 127 to 86. The bill,
    passed last month by France's lower house, the National Assembly,
    must now be signed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy before it can
    become law.

    Armenia hailed the French Senate vote as a day "written in gold,"
    while Turkey lamented "a black day in [France's] history."

    The bill initially pertained directly to the killing of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks from 1915 to 1917, but was later broadened to include
    all genocides recognized by the French government.

    'Permanent' consequences

    NATO allies Turkey, however, have threatened severe diplomatic
    fallout if the bill is rubber-stamped by Sarkozy. Ankara has already
    temporarily suspended relations with Paris.

    "Turkey is committed to taking all necessary steps against this
    unjust disposition, which reduces basic human rights to nothing,"
    Turkey's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

    Turkey's ambassador in Paris, Tahsin Burcuoglu, said the vote would
    lead to a total rupture of relations between the two countries.

    "When I say total rupture I include things like I can leave
    definitively," Burcuoglu told reporters. "You can also expect that
    now diplomatic relations will be at the level of charges d'affaires,
    not ambassadors anymore."

    The Turkish embassy in Paris said France was "in the process of losing
    a strategic partner."

    "If the law is adopted by the government, the consequences will be
    permanent," an embassy spokesman said.

    Recognition of two genocides

    The bill will mean that France will officially recognize two genocides
    - that of the Jews at the hands of the Nazis during the Second World
    War and the massacre of Armenians in eastern Turkey between 1915
    and 1917.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused French
    President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is seeking re-election later this year,
    of using the law to pander to France's estimated 400,000 voters of
    Armenian origin.

    After the lower house vote in December, Turkey suspended all bilateral
    cooperation with France and temporarily recalled its ambassador
    from Paris.

    Author: Mark Hallam, Richard Connor (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters) Editor:
    Andrew Bowen

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