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ANKARA: House receives Armenian 'genocide' resolution

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  • ANKARA: House receives Armenian 'genocide' resolution

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Feb 1 2007

    Interior Ministry anticipates further turmoil in wake of Dink killing

    House receives Armenian 'genocide' resolution

    The New Anatolian with AP / Washington
    01 February 2007


    Democratic and Republican lawmakers introduced a resolution on
    Tuesday urging the U.S. government to recognize so-called Armenian
    genocide.

    Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, a co-sponsor, acknowledged that the
    resolution might harm U.S.-Turkish relations in the short term.
    Nevertheless, he said, "I'm optimistic that the relationship will go
    on. We will move beyond this."

    Schiff and other lead sponsors who introduced the resolution in the
    House of Representatives say they have commitments from more than 150
    other members who want to add their names as co-sponsors after the
    legislation's introduction. That would be a strong show of support in
    the 435-member body.

    The sponsors, who held a press conference Tuesday attended by two
    Armenian survivors of the events, say that the move to Democratic
    control in Congress increases the chances that the bill will reach
    the House floor for a vote. Similar resolutions have been introduced
    in the past but were kept from a vote by congressional leaders.

    "We feel very strongly that this year is the year we're going to get
    this passed," said another co-sponsor, Democratic Rep. Frank Pallone
    Jr., whose state, New Jersey, has a large Armenian-American
    community.

    The bill, which claims that 1.5 million Armenians were killed almost
    a century ago in what it describes as genocide, is likely to draw
    reactions from Turkey. The Bush administration has warned that even
    congressional debate on the genocide question could damage relations
    with a vital Muslim ally and member of NATO.

    The resolution's supporters say that the leader of the House, Speaker
    Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, who has expressed support for the
    resolution, is likely to come under pressure from the Bush
    administration to keep the House from voting on the bill.

    "Make no mistake, the speaker will get a call from the president
    asking for no vote on the grounds of national security," said
    Republican Rep. George Radanovich, a co-sponsor.

    Turkey strongly opposes the claims that its predecessor state, the
    Ottoman Empire, caused the Armenian deaths in a planned genocide. The
    Turkish government has said the toll is wildly inflated and that
    Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest during the
    empire's collapse and the World War I conditions. Ankara's proposal
    to Yerevan to set up a joint commission of historians to study events
    of 1915 is still awaiting a positive response from the Armenian side.

    After French lawmakers voted in October to make it a crime to deny
    that the claims were a genocide, Turkey said it would suspend
    military relations with France.

    Turkey provides vital support for U.S. military operations in Iraq
    and Afghanistan.
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