Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ankara restores relations with Paris, revoking sanctions

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

  • Ankara restores relations with Paris, revoking sanctions

    Press TV, Iran
    July 6 2012


    Ankara restores relations with Paris, revoking sanctions


    Ankara has decided to restore diplomatic and economic relations with
    Paris following the new French government's decision to end its
    efforts to pass a bill to criminalize denial of Armenians genocide,
    Press TV reports.


    During a meeting in Paris on Thursday, foreign ministers of the two
    countries (Ahmet Davutoglu of Turkey and Laurent Fabius of France)
    agreed to improve the strained relations between the two countries
    over the Armenian genocide bill.

    Following the meeting with his French counterpart, Turkish foreign
    minister said: `as a result of the few difficulties which we
    experienced in the past, Turkey took a series of measures against
    France, but I would like to announce that these measures have been
    completely removed.'

    Former President of France Nicolas Sarkozy had previously proposed a
    bill to the French parliament to criminalize denial of the Armenians
    genocide by the Ottoman Empire, the modern-day Turkey, during the
    World War I, in a bid to garner the vote of the Armenian population of
    the country during the Presidential elections.

    However, the proposal which had caused widespread protests across
    Turkey and infuriated the Turkish establishment, was ultimately
    declared illegal by the French Constitutional Court.

    France had accused Turkey, and its forerunner the Ottoman Empire, of
    committing genocide against the Armenian population of the country
    during the last days of the Ottoman Empire before it collapsed in
    1915, an accusation Turkey has always strongly denied.

    Turkey has always resisted the term `genocide' being applied to the
    mass killing of the Armenian minority, arguing that they were not
    specifically targeted and thus the mass killings cannot properly
    constitute a genocide.

    At the meeting, Fabius hailed `a new period of relations on every
    level' between the two countries.

    In response to a question about Turkey's adhesion issue, Fabius
    implied that such a decision will require a referendum, adding `at the
    end of the day things will come down to the decision of the people,'
    However, on the other hand, President Hollande had previously stated
    that he did not foresee Turkey's acceptance into the EU bloc during
    the next five years.

    RM/MY/JR

Working...
X