France is set to vote by the end of January on a bill that would make it illegal to deny Armenian allegations.
Lawmakers in France's National Assembly -- the lower house of parliament -- voted overwhelmingly in favour of a draft law outlawing the denial of Armenian allegations in December, leading Ankara to cancel all economic, political and military meetings with Paris and recalling its ambassador for consultations.
The Senate will hold hearings on the bill on Jan. 5 and 11 to which legal experts, officials from Turkish and Armenian groups and the Turkish and Armenian ambassadors to Paris would be invited. The bill should then be presented to the Senate for a final vote in the last week of January.
Its backers want to see the process completed before parliament is suspended at the end of February ahead of presidential elections in April and May. A spokeswoman at the Turkish embassy said a date had not been set for the ambassador's return.
France's government has stressed that the bill, which mandates a maximum 45,000-euro fine and a year in jail for offenders, was not its own initiative but that of a lawmaker in Sarkozy's conservative party.
France is Turkey's fifth biggest export market and the sixth biggest source of its imports, with bilateral trade worth $14 billion in the first 10 months of 2011.
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