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ANKARA: MPs Voice Opposition To Genocide Resolution

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  • ANKARA: MPs Voice Opposition To Genocide Resolution

    MPS VOICE OPPOSITION TO GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 27 2007

    A six-person Turkish parliamentary delegation is in Washington to
    meet with their US counterparts to prevent the passage of the Armenian
    genocide resolution pending in Congress.

    The delegation, which consists of four members of the ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party) and two deputies from the opposition
    Republican People's Party (CHP), will have meetings with US senators
    and representatives.

    The Armenian genocide resolution was introduced on Jan. 30 at the US
    Congress, and currently has 170 co-sponsors.

    Two more visits are expected to Washington by different Turkish
    parliamentary delegations in March.

    Meanwhile, the Turkish head of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly has
    said that he submitted a letter to members of the US Congress at
    a NATO meeting in Brussels last week about Turkey's point of view
    regarding the Armenian genocide allegations.

    Vahit Erdem, AK Party parliamentarian and Turkish delegation chief
    of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, told reporters in Ankara that
    the US Congress members were impressed by the content of the letter,
    which urged the them not to approve the resolution.

    Erdem said the letter indicated: "If passed, the resolution would
    harm Turkish-American relations and damage efforts to improve ties
    between Armenia and Turkey. Parliaments should not have such duties as
    making judgments on historical issues, it said. "If the US Congress
    passes judgment on the issue, it would repeat the mistakes made
    by some European parliaments. Genocide is a serious, international
    crime that can only be judged by independent international courts,
    not individual parliaments of the countries."

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that 300,000 Armenians
    and at least as many Turks died in civil strife, when Armenians took
    up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
    troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire during World War I.
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