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France offers Turkey to protect “common interests”

21 January 2012 [10:32] - TODAY.AZ
French President Nicolas Sarkozy told Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to protect “common interests” in trade and regional affairs, in a letter ahead of a French vote on a bill criminalizing the denial of Armenian “genocide” that has brought bilateral ties to the brink of crisis.

Standing by the bill, Sarkozy said it did not target any specific country and aimed to preserve the memories of France’s Armenian community and “help them heal the wounds that have been opened about 100 years ago,” according to the text of the Jan. 18 letter released by the French Embassy. He stressed that Turkey should protect “the common interests uniting our peoples” and pointed at commercial exchanges and investments, cooperation in the struggle against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), the “added value” of bilateral coordination in crisis-management in the Middle East and the two countries’ alliance within NATO.

The authors of the bill were well aware of the suffering of the Turkish people during the dissolution years of the Ottoman Empire and World War I, he said. “I hope that common sense will prevail, as it ought to be between friends and allies, and that we will maintain dialogue. France is all ready to do that,” he added. In response to Turkish accusations of French atrocities in the past, Sarkozy said France had already acknowledged its responsibility for slave trade and the handover of French Jews to Nazi concentration camps. He stressed he had personally denounced the “unspeakable suffering” the French colonial rule had caused in Algeria in a speech in Algeria in 2007.


/Hurriyet Daily News/
URL: http://www.today.az/news/regions/101350.html

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