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Turkey Calms Response To Vote

TURKEY CALMS RESPONSE TO VOTE
By Andrew Borowiec

Washington Times, DC
Oct 15 2006

NICOSIA, Cyprus — Despite threats of retaliatory action and national
anger, Turkey appears to be stepping back from a prolonged clash with
France over a French parliamentary bill on the 90-year-old Armenian
massacres.

"The focus is on limiting the damage" after the French National
Assembly voted on Thursday to make any denial of the Ottoman mass
killings of Armenians a punishable offense, according to one diplomatic
report.

France’s leading politicians, including President Jacques Chirac
and his rivals, are on record in favor of keeping Turkey out of the
European Union unless it admits the massacres as genocide.

However, the French political class generally has remained lukewarm
following the decision by the lower house of Parliament, influenced
by the vocal Armenian lobby.

Only 106 of the 577 Assembly members voted for the proposed law,
with most others absent during the vote.

In his latest statement on the subject, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan said his government was studying retaliatory measures,
although the French Senate still would need to approve the National
Assembly’s action for it to become law.

"Turkey’s foreign trade volume with France is $10 billion, and
this is equal to 1.5 percent of France’s whole trade," Mr. Erdogan
said. "We are going to make the proper calculations and then take
the necessary steps."

A potential, though unofficial, act of retaliation occurred yesterday,
when a statue in Chaville, France, to commemorate the Armenian
massacres was reported stolen.

The bronze monument, installed in front of the train station in the
Paris suburb of Chaville in 2002, disappeared either Friday night or
yesterday morning, said authorities for the Haut-de-Seine region.

The police have not ruled out the possibility that the statue, which
weighs several hundred pounds, was stolen to be sold as scrap metal,
said Stephane Topalian, who serves on the board of the local chapter
of the Armenian church. However, Mr. Topalian stressed the timing
of the robbery, which followed the bill’s approval in France’s lower
house of Parliament.

The European Union, locked in difficult accession negotiations with
Turkey, opposes the French bill as provocative and fueling Turkish
nationalist anti-European sentiments. For their part, the nationalists
said they feel that Turkey has been slighted by the barrage of EU
demands to adjust its laws to European requirements.

Can Baydarol, a Turkish analyst, said the French vote was "proof of
the hostile attitude of France" to Turkey’s EU candidacy.

Last year, French voters rejected a proposed European Constitution,
in part because of fears that its adoption would facilitate Turkey’s
entry into the European Union.

The Armenian quest for international recognition of their national
tragedy received a significant boost when Orhan Pamuk, Turkey’s best
known novelist and critic of its treatment of minorities, received
the 2006 Nobel Prize for literature — on the day of the French
Parliament’s vote.

A succession of Turkey’s republican governments systematically has
denied any policy targeting its Armenian population but admits that
several hundred thousand Armenians died of ethnic strife and hardship
during a "resettlement march" to Syria between 1915 and 1917.

Members of the Armenian diaspora, mainly descendents of those who
escaped the massacres and settled in other parts of the world, claim
that Ottoman troops killed up to 1.5 million of their compatriots.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS
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