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| Turkey 'must admit Armenia dead' |
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Armenians say 1.5 million of their people died or were deported from their homelands under Turkish Ottoman rule. Mr Barnier did not say it was genocide, although the French parliament has done so in the past. Turkey says the victims died during civil unrest. Mr Barnier said France did not consider Turkish acknowledgement a condition of EU entry, but insisted his country would raise the issue once talks opened. Where Turkey's bid stands In addition, France believes that accession talks should not begin before the second half of 2005, Mr Barnier said. Turkey has pushed for immediate negotiations. "I believe that when the time comes, Turkey should come to terms with its past, be reconciled with its own history and recognise this tragedy," Mr Barnier said. 'So-called genocide' His comments drew no immediate official response from Turkey, which has consistently denied orchestrating genocide. A foreign ministry spokesman in the Turkish capital, Ankara, told Reuters that Turkey has never and will never recognise "any so-called genocide". Turkish relations with independent Armenia, which borders Turkey to the north, have long been coloured by the issue. About 300,000 Armenians live in France, more than in any other European country, and community leaders have pledged to pressure French President Jacques Chirac on the genocide issue during Turkish accession negotiations. France passed a law officially recognising the Armenian genocide in 2001, cooling relations with Turkey and scuppering a major arms deal. Another 14 nations, including Switzerland, Russia and Argentina, also classify the killings as genocide. |