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Three House Lawmakers Encourage Their Colleagues To Stop Genocide Re

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  • Three House Lawmakers Encourage Their Colleagues To Stop Genocide Re

    THREE HOUSE LAWMAKERS ENCOURAGE THEIR COLLEAGUES TO STOP GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    01.03.2010 13:47 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A trio of House lawmakers is encouraging their
    colleagues to stop the Armenian Genocide resolution before a key
    committee vote this week. In a February 22 letter to House Foreign
    Affairs Committee members, Reps. Steve Cohen, Kay Granger and Ed
    Whitfield ask their colleagues to reject a resolution that would
    recognize the killing of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians by the
    Ottoman Turks during World War I as Genocide, The Hill reported.

    "A vote on this resolution will do nothing to rectify the tragedies
    of the past, but it will most certainly have significant negative
    consequences on current and future relations with Turkey," the
    letter says. Cohen, Granger and Whitfield are all co-chairs of the
    Congressional Caucus on U.S.-Turkey Relations.

    The three lawmakers are also working on a separate letter to Reps.

    Howard Berman, the committee chairman, and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen,
    the panel's ranking member, opposing the resolution. The trio is
    gathering members' signatures and 14 lawmakers have signed onto the
    letter to Berman and Ros-Lehtinen. Aides are expecting many more to
    sign on before that letter's release on Tuesday.

    Turkey lobbies heavily against the resolution every Congress it is
    introduced, hiring some of K Street's biggest names in lobbying and
    public relations. In turn, Armenian-American groups push for the
    resolution's passage and, like Turkey, are trying to bolster their
    support on the House Foreign Affairs Committee before the key vote
    next week.

    Leaders of four groups - the Armenian Assembly of America, Armenian
    General Benevolent Union, the Eastern Diocese Armenian Church of
    America and the Western Diocese Armenian Church of America - wrote
    a February 25 letter to Berman, urging him to support the resolution.

    Doing so will "send a powerful message that America is committed to
    the fundamental principles of human rights and basic freedoms around
    the world," the letter says.

    The resolution has a good chance of passing the committee with Berman
    already supporting it. Including the California Democrat, there are
    16 lawmakers on the 46-member committee that are listed as co-sponsors.

    Overall in the House, the measure has 137 co-sponsors.

    The question remains as to what happens to the resolution if it passes
    the committee. In 2007, the resolution squeaked by the panel with
    a close vote of 27-21 in its favor. But after intense pressure from
    Turkey, Speaker Nancy Pelosi decided against bringing the resolution
    to the House floor after originally promising to do so.

    A spokesman for Pelosi did not say whether or not the House leader
    would bring the resolution to the floor for a vote if it passed the
    committee again.

    "It's important to take it one step at a time and see what the
    committee does next week. Following their action, we can have
    a discussion with the chairman and others about next steps," said
    Nadeam Elshami, Pelosi's spokesman.
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