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Paris-Ankara: 'Zero' Relations

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  • Paris-Ankara: 'Zero' Relations

    PARIS-ANKARA: 'ZERO' RELATIONS

    The Voice of Russia
    Jan 24 2012

    Diplomatic relations between France and Turkey are tending towards
    zero. That's how Ankara has reacted to the French Senate's approval of
    a bill that outlaws any public denial that the killings of Armenians
    which took place in the Ottoman Empire in 1915 were genocide. Turkey
    threatened to retaliate by introducing anti-French sanctions. The first
    blow came from the Turkish National Radio and Television Corporation
    which suspended cooperation with Euronews TV.

    Earlier, Turkey recalled its ambassador from Paris, froze its
    political, military and economic ties with France and cancelled joint
    military exercises.

    The bill imposes a punishment of up to one year in prison and a
    45,000-euro fine on anyone who dares deny the Armenian genocide.

    President Nicolas Sarkozy has two weeks to sign it into law.

    Turkey has vigorously protested the accusations of mass killings of
    Armenians during the First World War and reacted painfully to Western
    criticism. Meanwhile, the fact of genocide has been recognized by more
    than 20 countries, including Russia, Lithuania, Greece, Belgium, Canada
    and the majority of U.S. states. But that recognition envisaged no
    criminal penalties. Political analyst Stanislav Tarasov told the Voice
    of Russia that the fate of the genocide bill in France is still pretty
    vague and that 86 senators who voted against may attempt to block it:

    "The Turks may try to play the French senator card. Senators can appeal
    the bill in the Constitutional Court. This would require just 60%
    of the votes. Turkey also fears that other countries may follow suit
    and pass similar genocide laws, which would derail its long-cherished
    hopes to join the European Union. Finally, Turkey and Armenia might
    return to the Zurich protocols they signed in 2009. They contain
    a very important provision, namely that Yerevan agrees to move the
    genocide issue from big politics to the academic sphere."

    Some politicians in Ankara and in European capitals think that the past
    should be left in the past and that modern politics should be based
    on modern realities. And yet, genocide is too sensitive an issue for
    Armenia to be easily dropped. The Armenian government has already
    thanked Paris for support. The votes of 600,000 French Armenians
    whose representatives lobbied the new law will give President Sarkozy
    a significant boost in his bid for re-election.

    Analyst Alexander Sotnichenko believes that despite Ankara's tough
    response, any dramatic consequences for either Turkey or Europe
    are unlikely:

    "Well, Turkey might not become a fully-fledged member of the European
    Union, which, in my view, is on the whole a positive thing for Turkey,
    the EU and Russia. The European Union is in a deep crisis and should
    review its basic development concepts. Under the current circumstances,
    Turkey with its dynamic growth is unlikely to benefit the EU as it
    needs special adjustment programs."

    Inside Turkey, increasingly fewer people associate themselves with
    Europe. France's latest move might push Turkey to further distance
    itself from the West and look more towards Russia and the East.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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