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As Turkey And France Clash Over Armenian Genocide Law, Ankara Plots

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  • As Turkey And France Clash Over Armenian Genocide Law, Ankara Plots

    AS TURKEY AND FRANCE CLASH OVER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE LAW, ANKARA PLOTS NEXT MOVE
    By Sedat Ergin

    Worldcrunch
    http://www.worldcrunch.com/turkey-and-france-clash-over-armenian-genocide-law-ankara-plots-next-move/4568
    Jan 25 2012

    The French Senate passed a controversial law this week that makes it
    a crime to deny that Armenians were victims of a Turkish genocide.

    Turkey's Prime Minister Erdogan had angry words for France, but a
    closer look shows Ankara may have another strategy in the works.

    ISTANBUL - The French Senate's approval this week of a bill making it
    a crime to deny that Turkey committed genocide against Armenians has
    pushed the Paris-Ankara diplomatic standoff to a new phase. On one
    side is the Turkish government; on the other, a three-way coalition
    of President Nicolas Sarkozy, his Socialist party rival Francois
    Hollande and the Armenian lobby.

    The turf of this struggle has now moved from the halls of Parliament
    to the heart of French law.

    But it is first worth noting that Ankara's response to the Senate
    decision has been far more controlled than the virulent reaction first
    shown when the bill was accepted by the French Parliament in December.

    One explanation of this more moderate reaction was that Ankara has
    delayed putting into motion a 'plan of action' intended to truly
    retaliate against France. Speaking to his party's members of Parliament
    on Tuesday, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his government's
    reaction would depend on how the situation evolved, and that at this
    stage they would be "patient." This suggests there is no great rush
    regarding sanctions.

    Even though he used phrases such as 'racist' and 'the footsteps of
    fascism' when referring to Sarkozy, the Prime Minister's main message
    was that the issue would not shake Turkey. Erdogan said "Turkey would
    not stoop to quarrel with a small racist mentality." He added that
    Ankara would "act with the reason and reserve suitable to a great
    country,".

    The Prime Minister also noted that it would take 60 signatures for the
    Constitutional Council, which is charged with preserving the principles
    of the French Constitution, to object to the bill. This suggests that
    he doesn't want to burn bridges with those French lawmakers who are
    close to Turkey.

    Three options, two roads

    A roadmap with three options is taking shape for Turkey.

    The first, as the Prime Minister suggested, is for 60 representatives
    of the French Senate or 60 members from Parliament to apply to the
    Constitutional Council with an objection on grounds that the bill
    violates the French Constitution.

    This would need the support of about two-thirds of the 87 senators who
    voted in favor of Turkey in Monday night's vote. It seems that there
    is a group of Senators prepared to do this. On the other hand, both
    Sarkozy and Hollande, who are facing off in the French presidential
    election, are each applying significant pressure on their parties to
    prevent this.

    There is one significant detail to note. Even without reaching
    the threshold, if the Senators express their will to do this, the
    Constitutional Council can apply to the government and ask that the
    law be suspended without taking effect. If a formal petition is made,
    the law would likewise need to be suspended.

    What if this effort doesn't produce a result? The Constitutional
    Council has one more option to exercise its power: in 2008, a change
    to the French Constitution gave French citizens the right to apply
    directly to the Council if there was a situation which was potentially
    unconstitutional.

    In this case, a Turkish or French citizen who has said the events of
    1915 were not a genocide and has been penalized for this by a lower
    court could apply to the Constitutional Council. But this objection
    would first need to pass a higher court. If, in the final analysis,
    the Constitutional Court found this person justified, it would be a
    considerable victory for Turkey in France.

    Let us imagine that this route was taken and that the Constitutional
    Court nonetheless rejected this citizen's appeal. There would then
    be one more path to take: an appeal to the European Court of Human
    Rights in Strasbourg.

    In this event, the European tribunal would need to ascertain whether
    this law violates the European Convention on Human Rights. If it
    does reach this stage, this case would undoubtedly be one of the most
    critical files the European institution has ever taken up.

    Whichever route is followed, it is without question that Ankara is just
    at the beginning of a long, drawn-out, extremely difficult process.




    From: A. Papazian
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