Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Erdem: Anti-Genocide Resolution Letter Sent To US Congressme

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Erdem: Anti-Genocide Resolution Letter Sent To US Congressme

    ERDEM: ANTI-GENOCIDE RESOLUTION LETTER SENT TO US CONGRESSMEN

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Feb 27 2007

    A ruling party deputy yesterday made public details of a letter he
    delivered to the members of the U.S. House of Representatives which
    is about to discuss a resolution to recognize the Armenian genocide
    claims.

    Ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party Kirikkale Deputy and NATO
    Parliamentary Assembly Turkish Group Chairman Vahit Erdem delivered
    the letters at the Parliamentary Assembly of NATO in Belgium last week.

    Erdem, at a press conference in Parliament, said that he underlined
    in the letter the need for historical research rather than political
    talk over the issue and that he persuaded several congressmen to work
    against the resolution.

    Erdem also said that he told them the death toll was blown out of
    proportion by Armenian sources conveying the data in Ottoman Archives,
    which says the total population of Armenians in Turkey before the
    World War I was around 1,300,000.

    Several Turkish historians give smaller figures on the Armenian
    population, while Armenian and European sources give a range between
    1,500,000 and as high as 3,000,000.

    "If the Armenian resolution is passed by the U.S. Congress, relations
    between the two allies would be deeply hurt, and U.S. Congress
    would fall into error, making a political judgment rather than a
    historical one, as several European parliaments have done," Erdem
    said in the letter.

    He also added that genocide is internationally acknowledged as a
    crime against humanity that should be dealt with by independent courts.

    In related news, a group of Turkish parliamentarians has begun
    anti-resolution campaigning in the U.S. The group is expected to hold
    personal talks with congressional representatives and officials from
    the U.S. Secretariat of State in order to persuade them not to pass
    the resolution.

    Turkish deputies were set to lobby in the U.S. against the resolution
    weeks ago, but the delegation's visit was postponed in order to assess
    the outcome of Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and Chief of General
    Staff Gen. Yasar Buyukanit's recent talks with American officials.

    After the visit by the group, two others will pay visits to the U.S.
    in March.

    Turkey denies the allegations that some 1.5 million Armenians were
    massacred during the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire in World
    War I, arguing that Armenian deaths were part of general partisan
    fighting in which both sides suffered.

    Ankara and Yerevan are at odds over the Armenian claims of genocide.

    To break the deadlock, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    last year suggested the establishment of a committee of Turkish
    and Armenian historians to study the claims, in a letter sent to
    Armenian President Robert Kocharian. But Kocharian rejected Erdogan's
    proposal, saying that the two countries must first establish diplomatic
    relations and that committees could be formed only within the process
    of normalization of relations.
Working...
X