Category: France

  • Turkey warns French Socialists on genocide vote

    Turkey warns French Socialists on genocide vote

    PARIS, Jan 16: A senior Turkish diplomat warned France’s opposition Socialists that if they did not block a bill to make it illegal to deny the 1915 mass killing of Armenians by Ottomon Turks, they could damage relations with Ankara after an election this year.

    Lawmakers in the lower-house National Assembly voted overwhelmingly last month in favour of a draft law outlawing genocide denial, prompting Ankara to cancel all economic, political and military meetings with Paris and recall its ambassador for consultations.

    The bill will be presented to the Senate on Jan. 23 for a final vote, with the process to be completed before parliament is suspended in February ahead of presidential elections.

    The Socialist Party, which holds a majority in the Senate since elections in the upper house late last year, indicated last week that most left-wing senators would support it.

    “The message we are trying to pass to the Socialist Party and Francois Hollande is that you’ll make a bad start with Turkey if you vote this,” Kaya Turkmen, director general for Europe at the Turkish Foreign Ministry told Reuters at the Turkish embassy.

    Turkmen, who has previously served in Paris, is in the French capital until the vote next week, attempting to rally support against the vote.

    The legislation was originally proposed by the Socialists in 2006 with the aim of specifically criminalising the denial of an Armenian genocide. The bill was made more general in 2011, partly in the hope of appeasing the Turks.

    Hollande is the frontrunner to defeat President Nicolas Sarkozy in the two-round presidential election on April 22 and May 6. The bill will be a test of the party’s foreign policy programme, given that, unlike Sarkozy, it has previously backed bringing Turkey into the European Union.

    Officials at the French Foreign Ministry were not immediately available to comment on Turkmen’s remarks.

    Ankara sees the bill, proposed by 40 deputies from Sarkozy’s party, as a blatant attempt at winning the votes of some 500,000 ethnic Armenians in France and says it limits freedom of speech and meddles in a business best left to historians.

    “The (Turkish) government is under pressure from public opinion,” Turkmen said. “If France does this, we have to punish it one way or another.”

    The French government has stressed that the bill, which mandates a maximum 45,000-euro fine and a year in jail for offenders, had been put forward by lawmakers rather than itself.

    Successive Turkish governments and the vast majority of Turks feel the charge of genocide is an insult to their nation. Ankara argues that there was heavy loss of life on both sides during fighting in the area.

    If the bill passed, Ankara could again recall its ambassador, who returned to Paris earlier this month, and French firms could lose out on state-to-state contracts, Turkmen said.

    Turkey could not impose economic sanctions, given its World trade Organisation membership and customs’ union accord with Europe. But a spat with France would create diplomatic tensions as Turkey takes an increasingly influential role in the Middle East, especially over Syria and Iran, Turkmen said.

    “It won’t be business as usual,” he said.

    via THE DAILY STAR :: News :: International :: Turkey warns French Socialists on genocide vote.

  • Turkey’s arguments against Genocide bill untenable

    Turkey’s arguments against Genocide bill untenable

    YEREVAN.- Turkey’s arguments against adoption of a Genocide bill by the French Senate are untenable, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian told journalists on Monday.

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    “The arguments presented by the Turkish side are weak, to put it mildly,” he said. According to him, the Turkish side states adoption of the bill can hamper normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations. However, the major obstacle is Turkey’s position.

    Moreover, Turkey’s arguments on economic interests and interconnection between the bill and Ankara’s possible role in the region are hints at corruption, not only blackmail.

    French parliament adopted on December 22 a bill criminalizing genocide denials, including the Armenian Genocide. The bill will be debated by French Senate on January 23.

    via Turkey’s arguments against Genocide bill untenable – Armenian FM | Armenia News – NEWS.am.

  • Turkey will continue to impose its 8-point sanctions against France

    Turkey will continue to impose its 8-point sanctions against France

    During a joint press conference with his Norwegian counterpart Jens Stoltenberg, Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan reflected on regional issues, with the French National Assembly’s passing of the bill that criminalizes the denial of genocides, including the Armenian Genocide.

    88527Turkey’s PM noted that the Armenian bill was expected to enter the French Senate on January 23. “Turkey will continue to impose its eight-point sanctions against France. In addition, there is a reaction against the bill from within France. Collaborating with these circles, we will explain to Sarkozy’s authorities that these problems must be solved by the assistance of historians,” Erdogan said, Turkish Dunyabulteni website informs.

    In the Turkish PM’s words, the companies which have made investments in Turkey are concerned over this matter, too. “We will meet with French businessmen and remind the Senate about our sensitivity toward this problem. This is our shared problem. If the process continues, it could cause serious problems,” Recep Tayyip Erdogan added.

    To note, the French National Assembly passed, on December 22, the bill that criminalizes the denial of genocides. But the bill still needs to be approved by the French Senate to become a law. The bill sets a one-year prison sentence plus a 45-thousand-Euro fine for anyone who denies genocides. And in reprisal to the passage of this bill, Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced Turkey’s eight-point sanctions against France. Also, Erdogan accused French President Nicolas Sarkozy of “provoking Islamophobia” for election purposes, and accused France of committing genocide against the Algerians.

    via Turkey will continue to impose its 8-point sanctions against France – Turkish PM | Armenia News – NEWS.am.

  • Algerian Islamist party backs Turkey over genocide row

    Algerian Islamist party backs Turkey over genocide row

    Algerian Islamist party backs Turkey over genocide row

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    An Algerian Islamist party on Sunday sprang to the defence of Turkey’s prime minister after Algeria’s leader criticised Ankara for exploiting France’s oppression of Algerians during the colonial period.

    Bouguerra Soltani, head of the Social Movement for Peace (MSP) party, backed Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan after he was criticised by Algerian Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia.

    Turkey has accused France of hypocrisy for pushing a bill that would make it a crime for anyone to deny that the 1915-17 killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks amounted to genocide.

    Erdogan has argued that France is turning a blind eye to its own colonial-era killings in Algeria, at the end of World War II and during the north African nation’s struggle for independence between 1954 and 1962.

    “An estimated 15 percent of the Algerian population was massacred by the French from 1945 onwards,” Erdogan has said. “This is a genocide.”

    Ouyahia implicity rebuked him in remarks Saturday.

    Every country had the right to defend its interests, he said, but “nobody has the right to make the blood of Algerians their business”.

    Ouyahia noted that Turkey had been a member of NATO during the independence war in Algeria and as such had provided material support to France.

    “We say to our (Turkish) friends: Stop making capital out of Algeria’s colonisation,” he added.

    But Soltani said Sunday: “We don’t accept anyone saying that Erdogan is making the blood of Algerians their business,” he told reporters.

    “We have a historic cause,” he added.

    “Colonialism killed 5.5 million Algerians, 1.5 million of them during the (1954-1962) liberation war…,” he said, referring to the legacy of French occupation from 1830.

    When someone spoke up about your cause, he added, you should thank them rather than criticising them.

    Erdogan had asked nothing of Algeria, he added.

    “He just told France ‘You say that Turkey exterminated the Armenians in 1915, I am reminding you that you exterminated the Algerians’.

    “We support all those who call for France to officially acknowledge the crimes of colonial France and to apologise to and compensate the victims,” he added.

    He denounced Ouyahia’s comments as “a service rendered to France”.

    Algerian historians say that a French crackdown on a protest in the east Algerian city of Setif on May 8, 1945, to call for an end to French colonial rule, left 45,000 people dead.

    Western researchers put the death toll at between 8,000 and 18,000.

    The French lower house approved the genocide bill December 22 and the Senate is expected to vote on it by the end of January.

    If it is enacted, anyone denying that the 1915-1917 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turk forces amounted to genocide, could face jail time.

    © 2011 AFP

    via Algerian Islamist party backs Turkey over genocide row < French news | Expatica France.

  • Turkish threats quicken criminalization of Armenian Genocide

    Turkish threats quicken criminalization of Armenian Genocide

    By Sasun Hovhannisyan

    On December 22 the National Assembly of France adopted a bill criminalizing the denial of genocides. It will soon be sent to the French Senate’s floor.

    88282This bill was adopted sooner than expected and this in fact is a reaction to the Turkish attempts to increase pressures in the French. It is time that Turkey changed its attitude towards the Armenian genocide and withstand from the strategy of historical denial within its territory as well as internationally. This strategy is not giving any tangible results but alienating Turkey from its allies. Turkey’s attempt to blame the Armenian genocide recognition process on the Armenian Diaspora or local elections does not stand criticism by the fact that countries with little Armenian Diaspora, stronger Turkish communities and allies to Turkey, such as Sweden (in 2011), Poland (2005), the Netherlands (2004), Slovakia (2004), Germany (2005)  and many others have passed genocide recognition resolutions. This trend is bound to continue, the Turkish over-reaction to the issue increase the international community’s interest and international public awareness towards the Armenian genocide.

    The world is heading towards universal human values, where genocides and violations of human rights have less or no place. Yes, a few hundred years ago the sovereignty of the state was considered as a sacred and inviolable value and massacre of population within the state was considered as an internal issue. But the universal movement towards democracy and protection of human rights, which started just in France, has made humanitarianism as a universal value. In 1915 the Entente countries condemned the 1915 massacres of Armenians as a crime against humanity. And Turkey cannot fight against the pivotal value of the modern world through misrepresenting history and through political menaces. This strategy may lead Turkey to isolationism.

    The countering of the freedom of speech to criminalization of the denial of genocides is not appropriate, because the freedom of speech itself is subject to some legal restrictions, including by some articles in the Genocide Convention. The same logic forbids fascistic and racial appeals, the destructive power of which was strengthened by “scientific” arguments several decades ago. Also, freedom of speech can by no means justify the falsification of history and disrespect towards the descendents and victims of millions of Armenians during the First World War.

    For decades now the descendents of the victims of the Armenian genocide have struggled against denial of the genocide throughout the world. And the reason of some of the success stories does not lie in their political and economic power, but in the righteousness of their cause. They are acting by “Never again” motto. The Armenian genocide became a precedent for the following genocides, as the Holocaust, Cambodia, Ruanda, and Darfur, the first genocide of the 21st century. The atmosphere of impunity and the absence of condemnation of genocides prepare a ground for a repetition of a new genocide .Many people recall the famous expression of Hitler in 1939 August about the extermination of the Armenians. Then it was already too late as the extermination of the Jews in Europe had started. But before coming to power, in 1931 June, Hitler gave an interview to a German paper where he mocked the massacres of the Armenians and used it as a possible specimen for repetition towards other peoples under different circumstances. I mean to say that the absence of condemnation of genocide and impunity directly hit its prevention in the future. Genocide denier under the circumstances of impunity supports a birth of genocide.

    For anyone to believe in the Turkish claims that there are differing sides to the Armenian genocide is as much an outrage as it would be for Germany to say that the work of Jewish scholars, witnesses, and victim testimonies represented merely the “Jewish side” of the Holocaust. To deny genocide victims their history and suffering is tantamount to making them victims again.

    Indeed there are many people in Turkey, especially the intellectuals, who do accept that a genocide of Armenians was committed a hundred years ago in Turkey, but on the other hand there is still Article 301 in the Turkish Penal Code, which can penalize anyone accepting the fact of the Armenian genocide. On the one hand, Turkey demands respect of freedom of speech (i.e. understanding under it the denial of genocide), on the other hand, in its own country restricts the same freedom of speech (i.e acceptance of genocide), thus acting as a classical example of an actor of double-standards.

    Few, if any, doubt the fact of the Armenian genocide. France reiterated that the issue is about a historical event, the reality of which is a fact. The US debates of the Armenian genocide do not doubt the ample existence of genocidal facts. Every US President sends words of compassion to the Armenian people and descendents of the victims of the genocide. Academicians, political circles, the public in general and most of the states in the US do accept the fact of the Armenian genocide, but under the current situation, due to some political calculations, this has not yet been officially done. But that is a matter of time.

    By the example of France, others will recognize the genocide and criminalize its denial. Many states will appeal to Turkey to face its historical past as long as Turkey does not give up its policy of denial. This is a route that former colonial powers of Europe passed. Europe has long ago reconciled with its past and come to terms with the mistakes and/or crimes of some of their predecessors, and sincerely, I think Europe will keep its doors closed to Turkey as long as Turkey does not cross that path. Threats of revenge and sanctions merely downgrade Turkey.

    Now Turkey faces a dilemma. On the one hand it can continue its policy of denial, its hostile policy towards Armenia (a proof of which is its blockade of Armenia), thus heading to a stalemate by deteriorating its relations with its allies and further losing its image. On the other hand, it can rise from a denier state to a state committed to universal human values by facing its historical past, by normalizing its relations with Armenia without any conditions, opening borders and establishing diplomatic relations with Armenia. This would mean that Turkey is a mature state and is willing to engage with its neighbours and is not continuing the Armenophobic policies of the Young Turks. Otherwise, so far, the zero policy with neighbours has led to zero results.

    Recognition of the Armenian genocide does not threaten the Turkish statehood or its territorial integrity. There is no connection between genocide recognition and territorial claims. In fact, all Armenian Presidents have said so. There is no legal argument either. Genocide recognition cannot result in territorial reparations. This issue is often manipulated by nationalist politicians. Yet, the end of denial will enable the reconciliation between the Turkish and Armenian peoples, of which both will be the winners.

    Sasun Hovhannisyan is President of the French-Armenian Youth Foundation (FAYF), student at the University of Lyon.

  • Algerian PM Ouyahia to Turkey: stop making political capital of France massacre of Algerians

    Algerian PM Ouyahia to Turkey: stop making political capital of France massacre of Algerians

    Algerian Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia talks to journalists upon his arrival at Tunis’ Carthage Airport on December 3, 2008. Ouyahia has asked Turkey to stop citing French genocide of Algerians as it engages in a war of words with France over the 1915 Armenian genocide.

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    Photograph by: STR, AFP/Getty Images

    ALGIERS – Algerian Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia urged Turkey Saturday to stop trying to make political capital out of France’s killing of thousands of Algerians during the colonial period.

    He made the call as Turkey continued to assail Paris ahead of a French Senate vote on a bill that would make it a crime for anyone to deny that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks 1915-17 amounted to genocide.

    Turkey has accused France of hypocrisy for its own hand in killings committed in its former colony, Algeria, in 1945 and during the north African nation’s struggle for independence between 1954 and 1962.

    “An estimated 15 per cent of the Algerian population was massacred by the French from 1945 onwards,” Erdogan has said. “This is a genocide.”

    Ouyahia said every country has the right to defend its interests, but “nobody has the right to make the blood of Algerians their business.”

    French forces cracked down on a protest in the east Algerian city of Setif on May 8, 1945, to call for an end to French colonial rule, leaving 45,000 people dead, according to Algerian historians.

    Western researchers put the death toll at between 8,000 and 18,000.

    Ouyahia noted that Turkey had been a member of NATO during the war in Algeria and as such had provided material support to France.

    “We say to our (Turkish) friends: Stop making capital out of Algeria’s colonisation,” Ouyahia said at a press conference.

    The French lower house approved the genocide bill December 22 and the Senate is expected to vote on it by the end of January.

    If it is enacted, anyone denying that the 1915-1917 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turk forces amounted to genocide, could face jail time.

    © Copyright (c) AFP

    via Algerian PM Ouyahia to Turkey: stop making political capital of France massacre of Algerians.