CoE Justice Ministers Launch A Conference In Yerevan

COE JUSTICE MINISTERS LAUNCH A CONFERENCE IN YEREVAN

Panorama.am
20:51 11/10/06

27th conference of Council of Europe (CoE) member states’ justice
ministers will kick off in Yerevan tomorrow. The conference is
titled "Victims: status, rights and assistance." Only four out of 46
participants did not arrive in Yerevan.

"I think the topic of the conference complies with the principles of
the Council of Europe in relation to fostering human rights," Guy de
Vel, general director on legal issues of the CoE General Secretariat,
said in a joint press conference with the Armenian Justice Minister
Davit Harutunyan.

Guy de Vel said, "The conference is actually the continuation of the
wonderful cooperation that has been established with your country
long ago."

Speaking about Armenia’s CoE commitments Guy de Vel mentioned that
Armenia has implemented most of her commitments. "Armenia is making
constant progress but there is a lot to be done yet," he said. He
also said the conference will also decide on the venue of the next
conference.

ANKARA: FM: Armenian Bill Will Harm France, Not Turkey

FM: ARMENIAN BILL WILL HARM FRANCE, NOT TURKEY

Anatolia news agency, Ankara,
11 Oct 06

Ankara, 11 October: "If French parliament adopts the draft law
(which envisions denial of so-called Armenian genocide as crime),
Turkey will not lose anything, but France will lose not only Turkey
but also many other things," Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul
told reporters after his meeting with Foreign Minister Fred Mitchell
of the Bahamas in Ankara on Wednesday [11 October].

Upon a question about French parliament’s debate the draft law
tomorrow, Gul said that Turkey has exerted every type of efforts on
all levels to warn France.

"Turkish politicians, businessmen, the government, parliament, ruling
and opposition parties, deputies and intellectuals have all exerted
efforts. Also the EU stated that this issue is very wrong. I hope
France will not be the victim of small inner policy tools. I hope
France, which is the homeland of freedoms and liberty as well as
the pioneer of freedom of thought and expression, will not become
a country where people are imprisoned as they release the documents
and express their thoughts," Gul noted.

Gul added that turning of EU’s locomotive country and pioneer of
freedoms into such a country will concern France more than Turkey.

French Government Distances Itself From Armenian Genocide Bill

FRENCH GOVERNMENT DISTANCES ITSELF FROM ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
October 10, 2006 Tuesday 1:56 PM EST

DPA POLITICS France Diplomacy Turkey French government distances
itself from Armenian genocide bill Paris The French government on
Tuesday distanced itself from a bill, drawn up by the opposition
Socialist Party, that would make it a crime to deny that Turkey had
committed genocide against

the Armenian people more than 90 years ago.

The bill, which is to be examined Thursday in the National Assembly,
"does not involve the government" and "is not necessary," foreign
ministry spokesman Jean-Baptiste Mattei told journalists in Paris.

The proposed law has provoked rage in Turkey, which has threatened
to carry out economic boycotts against French companies. In 2001,
bilateral relations suffered a similar setback when France passed a
law in which the murder of thousands of Armenians in the declining
days of the Ottoman Empire was characterized as "genocide."

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday said the
proposed law was a blow against freedom of speech and that a "populist
and cheap game" was being played by French politicians.

"This wrong move will change nothing for Turkey but it will change
a lot for France … When did it become France’s duty to get involved

in a problem between Turkey and Armenia? The world is not a campus
for colonizers any more. That era is over," Erdogan said.

It was not clear if the bill would receive enough votes to pass
through the National Assembly. On Thursday, the majority UMP party
said most of its deputies would not take part in the vote.

The dispute comes less than two weeks after French President Jacques
Chirac, on a visit to Armenia, said he wanted Turkey to admit

the Armenian genocide before it could join the European Union,
a condition no one else has ever set for Ankara.

Turkey Unites To Oppose French Plans For Armenian Law

TURKEY UNITES TO OPPOSE FRENCH PLANS FOR ARMENIAN LAW
by: Ingo Bierschwale, dpa

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
October 10, 2006 Tuesday 11:50 AM EST

DPA POLITICS Turkey Politics France Armenia NEWS FEATURE: Turkey
unites to oppose French plans for Armenian law Ingo Bierschwale, dpa
Istanbul On a visit to Ankara at the beginning of the year, French
Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy highlighted the interest shown
by French business in investing in Turkey, particularly in the huge
project to construct a nuclear power station at Sinop on the Black Sea.

Now, instead of lucrative contracts, those same companies face a
boycott of their products, and political relations between the two
countries have plumbed a low not seen since that of five years ago.

Then France passed a law in which the murder of thousands of Armenians
in the declining days of the Ottoman Empire was characterized as
"genocide."

The reason for Turkish anger this time is that France may take
a further step with a proposed law that would make it a criminal
offence to deny the genocide that took place 90 years ago.

That anger is being expressed right across Turkish politics, by
business leaders and by consumer associations, ahead of consideration
of the bill by the French National Assembly on Thursday.

Ankara has made clear it will not stand idle. The Turkish government
sees the French move as yet another attempt to sabotage talks about
Turkish accession to the European Union that are in any case bogged
down.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called in French business leaders
over the weekend and demanded that these top representatives of French
companies like Renault and Peugeot, Lafarge, Carrefour and Danone to
use their influence at home.

The Foreign Ministry warned on Monday that if the draft law is
accepted, this would be seen as a "hostile decision" that would have
consequences for economic links between the two countries.

France could expect to be excluded from large-scale projects in
Turkey. And calls for a boycott of French products and even for French
visitors to apply for a visa were being raised.

Turkey is particularly outraged and embittered at what it sees as
double standards in the European Union.

Turkey has to endure harsh criticism that there are limits there
on freedom of expression, while precisely this is what is now being
restricted in France.

With the proposed law France, which has "since the revolution of 1789
been in the vanguard of human rights," is now returning to "the Middle
Ages," in the words of Rifat Hisarciklioglu, president of the Union
of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey.

And even Turkish intellectuals, who have been brought before the
courts in Turkey because of their opinions on the Armenian question,
have come out against the French draft bill.

Hrant Dink, publisher of the Turkish-Armenian weekly newspaper Agos,
said that if the proposal was passed, he would travel to France
with the express purpose of "denying the genocide," even though he
is convinced of the opposite and is in fact facing prosecution in
Turkey for this reason.

The French initiative displayed the same "mentality" as that shown
by those in Turkey who strongly reject the allegation that genocide
took place, Dink said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkish Prime Minister Blasts French Parliament For Genocide Bill

TURKISH PRIME MINISTER BLASTS FRENCH PARLIAMENT FOR GENOCIDE BILL

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
October 10, 2006 Tuesday 9:51 AM EST

DPA POLITICS Turkey Diplomacy France Turkish prime minister blasts
French parliament for genocide bill Ankara Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan launched a scathing attack Tuesday on a bill before
the French parliament that would make it a crime to deny the massacres
of Armenians by Ottoman forces during and after the First World War.

Speaking to party colleagues in Ankara, Erdogan said the proposed law
was a blow for freedom of speech and tjat a "populist and cheap game"
was being played by French politicians.

"This wrong move will change nothing for Turkey but it will change a
lot for France… When did it become France’s duty to get involved
in a problem between Turkey and Armenia. The world is not a campus
for colonisers any more. That era is over," Erdogan said.

Turkey admits there were massacres of Armenians during the last
years of the Ottoman Empire but vehemently denies that the killings
constituted a genocide.

Armenian historians claim that as many as 1.5 million Christian
Armenians were killed during and after the First World War and that
the massacres were a clear genocide.

Turkey counters that Armenians sided with invading Russian forces
and that the numbers of Armenians killed was around 300,000.

On Tuesday Erdogan repeated his call for a joint Turkish-Armenian
conference of historians and lawyers to look into the claims, a call
that has been previously rejected by Armenia.

"Leave these decisions to historians, not politicians… We have no
fears," Erdogan said.

The government, opposition parties, business leaders and non-
governmental organizations have all strongly criticized the proposed
law that is to be debated by the French parliament on Thursday.

Although the government has not explicitly outlined what action it
may take if the bill passes.

Public boycotts of French-owned companies would almost certainly be
organized while official government actions such as banning French
firms from taking part in military tenders would probably not be
implemented until after the bill is signed into law by President
Jacques Chirac.

The Plight Of The Dispossessed

THE PLIGHT OF THE DISPOSSESSED
by Haig Balian

Kingston Whig-Standard (Ontario)
October 10, 2006 Tuesday

During the summer, while the front pages of world newspapers were
dominated by news of bombs flying in Lebanon and Israel, the headlines
here in Sri Lanka focused exclusively on one thing: the escalating
war between the army and the Tamil Tigers.

To the rest of the world, these conflicts may seem quite different.

To the people caught in the middle, however, the results are the
same. Masses of people, displaced by violence, have left their homes
to forge a life in unfamiliar and sometimes hostile environments.

In my increasingly unsafe perch in Colombo, I’ve been watching both
these conflicts with interest. Two generations of my family – my
parents and their parents – left their homelands in search of peace and
stability. In time, they were able to find what they were looking for.

When I look at today’s refugees streaming away from their homes,
I have to ask myself: Will they find what they’re looking for?

The future looks bleak. In Lebanon, a fragile ceasefire could give
way at any point, perhaps to another civil war. Even if peace holds,
the rebuilding will last for years, possibly decades. Many Lebanese,
so hopeful after 15 years of stability, are wondering whether a viable
future can be found in their native country.

In Sri Lanka, on the other hand, a ceasefire signed in 2002 has
already unravelled. Last month, a bomb exploded barely 500 metres
from the front steps of my apartment, killing a three-year-old boy.

One week later, another bomb, this one packed inside one of the
three-wheeler taxis that are ubiquitous in this country, exploded on
a busy commercial street I’d been walking on just an hour earlier.

Seven died and scores were injured.

And that’s just in the city of Colombo. In eastern Sri Lanka, on the
other side of the country, the situation is more depressing. Muttur, a
largely Muslim town set on a bay popular with European sun-worshippers
in normal times, was laid siege in late July. The Muslims, truly the
forgotten group in a conflict that has pitted Tamil against Sinhalese
for 30 years, tell stories of terror and broken promises.

Many Sri Lankans who are forced to leave their communities are not
designated as refugees but as "IDPs": internally displaced persons.

Like the victims of Hurricane Katrina in the United States, they are
rootless in their own country.

One notable exception is the Tamils who live on the northern tip
of the country. Some are lucky and make it to Tamil Nadu, an Indian
province just across the channel from Sri Lanka. However, boatloads
of refugees are intercepted every day by the Sri Lankan navy.

Slowly, internally displaced persons have been trickling to safety.

Recently, 158 Muslims reached Negombo, a town north of Colombo best
known to tourists for its beach resorts. When I visited, they were
sleeping in classrooms at a Muslim school, but hopeful that a move
to a camp administered by the local Red Cross was coming soon.

Their leader was Mohammed Subair, a man whose small stature could
not conceal a simmering rage. There’s a lot of anger at the camp,
most of which is directed at the Tamil Tigers. I’d been told that
the Tigers were anything but popular here, and now I learned why.

"We spoke with the [Tamil Tiger] leader, he promised us security,"
Subair said. "The [Tiger] armed guard also promised food and goods,
and that he would not harass us. He said, ‘We are checking only the
perimeter.’ But they arrested around 50 youths and they bound their
hands behind them… [From this 50], they [took] two youths and
killed them both. The public asked, ‘Why did you kill them?’ Then
they answered, ‘If you ask that question, you will be killed also.’ "

The 2004 tsunami ravaged Muttur, displacing thousands. Many had
returned to their newly rebuilt homes, ready to begin their lives
again. This war has wiped away the gains of 20 months’ hard work.

But the lesson that nothing is permanent is ingrained in the minds
of many refugees, my mother included.

My maternal grandfather, my Dede, had the misfortune of being born
in 1905 in what is now eastern Turkey, a time and place not overly
kind to Armenians. The Armenian genocide, which culminated in 1915,
expanded the Armenian diaspora to unprecedented proportions, and no
Armenian community was larger than the one in Beirut.

It was in this city that Dede found a haven, and for a long while he
and his family lived under a veneer of stability. He made a name for
himself as a mechanic, then opened a corner store. He became a deacon
at the local church. His five children – of whom my mother is the
youngest – received a good education at the local Armenian schools,
learning Arabic, English and a smattering of French.

But in 1976, around the time the Lebanese civil war was beginning,
it was my mother’s turn to flee. Sixty years of sinking roots in a
country were insignificant when faced with unceasing mortar rounds.

"I remember one night when the artillery shells were just passing by,
and you feel that it’s going to explode in your building," my mother
recalled. "That’s when my family decided it’s time for me and my
sister to leave Lebanon."

They weren’t alone. By some estimates, the civil war in Lebanon
resulted in an exodus of up to a million people, roughly a quarter of
the country’s population. While many returned, a sizable proportion,
including my mother, settled in the West.

Eventually, after years of struggle, she, too, found her haven.

Today, my mother is a counsellor at a women’s shelter, Kingston
Interval House. She owns her own home and has seen two sons attain
a higher education.

But what of the refugees and internally displaced persons streaming
from their homes in Sri Lanka? What about their dreams?

It’s clear that most don’t want to return to their homes. Despite the
fact that Muttur is no longer a war zone, aid workers are reporting
that internally displaced persons are still too scared to return.

Residents of Kantale, the town in northeastern Sri Lanka that has
become a major gateway for the displaced, are anxious for their
unexpected visitors to leave.

For the Muslims in Negombo, the chances of finding refuge in Canada
are slim. They have no possessions to speak of, little money and no
know-ledge of French or English. Only a few are educated. Unlike the
Tamils in the north, they don’t even have the option of attempting
to make a run for India. In a country where poverty is rampant,
the West is a viable option for only a few. For better or for worse,
their future is tied to Sri Lanka.

In Lebanon, where a flight to North America or Europe is less of a
pipe dream, there seems to be a determination to rebuild once more.

True, some will leave, never to go back. But most are now returning
to their homes, and will attempt to reconstruct their shattered lives.

But these dreams can never be attained without a measure of
stability. And the responsibility for providing this, at least in the
short term, seems to fall on governments that have other priorities
in mind.

In short, what the refugees and internally displaced persons are
looking for is what my family finally attained. They’re looking
for peace.

And it’s completely out of their hands.

-Haig Balian, a Kingston native, recently graduated from the diploma
in journalism program at Concordia University in Montreal. He received
a $20,000 grant from the International Development Research Council
in Ottawa, which he used to travel to Sri Lanka and report on stories
there.

Turkey In Last-Ditch Appeal For France To Drop ‘Genocide’ Bill

TURKEY IN LAST-DITCH APPEAL FOR FRANCE TO DROP ‘GENOCIDE’ BILL

Agence France Presse — English
October 11, 2006 Wednesday 4:31 PM GMT

Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul Wednesday launched a last-ditch
appeal to France to drop a bill on the World War I massacres of
Armenians which has threatened to poison bilateral ties.

"I hope France, the homeland of freedom where everyone is able to
express their opinions freely, will not turn into a country where
people are jailed for expressing their opinions and publishing
documents," Gul told reporters here.

"If the bill is adopted, Turkey will not lose anything, but France
will lose not only Turkey, but something of itself as well."

The French national assembly is scheduled to vote Thurday on the bill,
which provides for a year in prison and a 45,000-euro (57,000-dollar)
fine for denying that Armenians were the victims of genocide between
1915 and 1917 under the Ottoman Empire, Turkey’s predecessor.

If the bill passes through the assembly, it will have to be approved
by the Senate and the president before it becomes law in what is
expected to be a lenghty process.

Ankara has warned that bilateral ties will suffer a serious blow and
French companies will be barred from economic projects if the bill
is adopted.

Turkish officials largely see the draft law as a gesture to France’s
large Armenian community before legislative elections next year.

The French government has described the bill as unnecessary, while
the ruling UMP party bloc has distanced itself from the draft, which
was tabled by the Socialist opposition.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

Turkey rejects the genocide label, arguing that 300,000 Armenians
and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with invading
Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkish MPs Drop Proposal To Hit Back At France With Algeria Law

TURKISH MPS DROP PROPOSAL TO HIT BACK AT FRANCE WITH ALGERIA LAW

Agence France Presse — English
October 11, 2006 Wednesday

Turkish legislators Wednesday dropped proposals to brand as genocide
the killings of Algerians under French colonial rule.

The drafts had been submitted in retaliation to a French bill that,
if accepted, would provide jail terms for those who deny that Turks
committed genocide against Armenians during World War I.

"We should not fall in France’s position. We should avoid the same
mistake of writing history with parliamentary decisions," Mehmet
Dulger, a senior lawmaker from the ruling Justice and Development
Party, said during the debate at the parliament’s justice commission.

Ibrahim Ozdogan from the opposition center-right Motherland Party,
and the author of one of the three drafts the commission examined,
argued that European countries should rethink the massacres of their
own colonial past.

"The murderer has come to take the judge’s seat," he said.

After a three-hour debate, commission members voted to refer the
proposals to a sub-committee for further discussion, a move that
effectively freezes the proposals.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had urged legislators Tuesday to
refrain from any retaliatory action, saying, "we do not clean filth
with filth."

The French draft, to be debated and voted at the National Assembly
in Paris on Thursday, foresees one year in prison and a 45,000-euro
(57,000-dollar) fine for denying that Armenians were victims of
genocide during World War I.

Infuriated by the move, Ankara has warned that if the bill is adopted,
bilateral ties will suffer and French companies will be barred from
major economic projects in Turkey.

Two of the drafts examined Wednesday call for the recognition of
the killings of Algerians under French colonial rule as genocide and
provide jail terms for those who deny it.

The third draft called for the imprisonment of those who assert
Armenians were victims of genocide under the Ottoman Empire.

The justice commission is the first instance where bills are debated
before being sent to a vote at the general assembly.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

Turkey rejects the genocide label, arguing that 300,000 Armenians
and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with invading
Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart.

French ‘Genocide’ Bill Threatens To Scupper Trade With Turkey

FRENCH ‘GENOCIDE’ BILL THREATENS TO SCUPPER TRADE WITH TURKEY
by Hande Culpan

Agence France Presse — English
October 11, 2006 Wednesday

France risks losing an important economic partner in Turkey and being
left out of major projects ranging from the defense sector to energy
if it adopts a controversial bill on the World War I-era massacres
of Armenians.

The French national assembly is scheduled to vote Thurday on the bill,
which provides one year in prison and a 45,000-euro (57,000-dollar)
fine for denying that Armenians were the victims of genocide between
1915 and 1917 under the Ottoman Empire, Turkey’s predecessor.

If the bill passes through the assembly, it will have to be approved
by the Senate and the President before it becomes law in what is
largely expected to be a lenghty process.

Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul has already warned that French
companies should expect to be barred from major tenders and several
civic groups have threatend to boycott French goods if the bill
is approved.

This would be a repetition of what happened in 2001, when France
officialy recognised the Armenian massacress as genocide, but French
businessmen here feel the repercussions of the new bill could be
more severe.

"In 2001, Turkey went though a huge economic crisis and the boycott
of French goods was forgotten. But I do not think it will be the same
this time round," Raphael Esposito, director of the French-Turkish
Chamber of Commerce, told AFP. "The wound will be deeper and will
not heal as quickly."

Analysts say Turkey cannot cancel projects already awarded to French
companies, but could easily bar them from future tenders.

One project France is interested in is the planned construction of
the country’s first nuclear power plant, which calls for an initial
investment of four billion dollars (about 3.1 billion euros).

The government plans to build three nuclear power plants with a total
capacity of about 5,000 megawatts, to be operational in 2012, in hopes
of preventing a possible energy shortage and reducing dependence on
foreign supplies, mainly from Russia and Iran.

Nuclear Power International (NPI), a subsidiary of Germany’s Siemens
and France’s Framatome, had previously bid in a now-defunct tender
to build a nuclear plant on Turkey’s southern Mediterranean coast.

Another area that could be adversely affected by the French bill is
the defence industry.

Eurocopter, the fruit of a Franco-German merger, is among four foreign
companies to submit bids for the purchase of 52 general-purpose
search-and-rescue helicopters for military and civilian use, a project
said to be worth several million dollars.

French companies are also keen to participate in several transport
and infrastructure projects in major Turkish cities, such as the
extension of Istanbul’s underground railway system.

Analysts, however, say Turkey could keep planned economic sanctions on
a strict bilateral level and not move against multinational companies
that may include France.

The French bill, if approved, is also likely to hit some 250 French
firms already present in Turkey and active in sectors ranging from food
and the automobile industry to banking and insurance, and providing
employment for about 65,000 people.

"All this is very tiring," Esref Hamacioglu, the director in Turkey
of Sodexho, a French food voucher company.

He said his firm lost about one million euros (1.25 million dollars)
in 2001, during a two-week boycott triggered by France’s recognition
of the Armenian massacres as genocide.

Bilateral trade between the two countries totalled 8.2 billion euros
(10 billion dolars) in 2005.

France also plays a leading role in foreign direct investment in
Turkey with 2.1 billion dollars (1.6 billion euros) last year and 328
million dollars (260 million euros) in the first seven months of 2006.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

French MPs To Debate Armenia ‘Genocide’ Bill, Angering Turkey

FRENCH MPS TO DEBATE ARMENIA ‘GENOCIDE’ BILL, ANGERING TURKEY
by Marc Burleigh

Agence France Presse — English
October 11, 2006 Wednesday

French MPs are set to debate Thursday a bill on the 1915-1917 massacres
of Armenians by the Ottomans which, if passed into law, could gravely
threaten France’s economic relations with Turkey.

Tabled by the left-wing opposition, the draft law would make it a
crime in France to deny that the massacres constituted genocide,
hitting violators with a prison term of up to one year and a fine of
up to 45,000 euros (57,000 dollars).

Turkey, the modern state which emerged from a sprawling Ottoman Empire
that included Armenia, contests the term "genocide" for the killings
and strongly opposes the bill’s provisions.

It says 300,000 Armenians, and at least as many Turks, died in civil
strife when Armenians took up arms for independence and sided with
invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire fell apart during World
War I.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their ancestors were slaughtered
in orchestrated killings.

Around 400,000 people of Armenian origin are estimated to live in
France, the most famous being the singer Charles Aznavour, born
Chahnour Varinag Aznavourian to immigrant parents.

In 2001 France adopted a law calling the massacres a genocide,
but the new bill would, in addition, make it illegal to deny that
genocide took place, much in the way denial of the Holocaust during
World War II is a crime.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday warned that
passage of the bill would be a mistake bearing serious consequences
for French investors in Turkey.

"We expect Paris to avoid this blunder, this political accident that
will harm Turkish-French relations," he told members of his party.

Erdogan claimed the criminalisation of those who challenged the
use of "genocide" for the Armenian killings ran counter to freedom
of expression in the European Union, which Turkey itself is under
pressure to respect as it seeks membership.

Ankara has warned France that its companies will be barred from
potentially lucrative economic projects in Turkey, including a planned
nuclear power plant, if the bill is adopted.

The Ankara Chamber of Commerce, which groups some 3,200 businesses,
has also threatened to boycott French goods.

At stake is bilateral trade that totalled 8.2 billion euros (10
billion dollars) in 2005.

But observers warned that any economic retaliation could prove worse
for Turkey than for France.

France plays a leading role in foreign direct investment in Turkey,
with 2.1 billion dollars (1.7 billion euros) last year and 328 million
dollars in the first seven months of this year. About 250 French firms
are active in Turkey, providing employment for about 65,000 people.

Nevertheless, Chirac’s ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) party
has been unsettled by the intensity of the Turkish backlash over the
proposed law, which was entered by the opposition Socialist Party.

On Tuesday, French foreign ministry spokesman Jean-Baptiste Mattei
told reporters that the bill "does not implicate the government" and
"in our view, it is not necessary".

The head of the UMP majority in parliament, Bernard Accoyer, said
a "large number" of the party’s MPs would abstain from voting on
the bill.

"The law is not the best tool to write history," he said.

The furore also plays out against the context of Turkey’s EU membership
bid, and France’s key role in deciding its fate.

Chirac has championed Turkey’s ambition to join the European Union,
but domestic opposition — including within the UMP — has since
prompted him to add conditions and qualifications.

On a recent trip to Armenia, he said Turkey should recognise the
Armenian killings as a genocide before being allowed to join the EU.

But he also called the opposition bill "deliberately controversial".

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress