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U.S. Congress To Mull New Armenian Genocide Bill

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  • U.S. Congress To Mull New Armenian Genocide Bill

    U.S. CONGRESS TO MULL NEW ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL
    By Aram Vanetsian in Los Angeles

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 10 2007

    Buoyed by the Democratic takeover of the U.S. Congress, pro-Armenian
    members of the House of Representatives will re-introduce this month a
    draft resolution recognizing the World War I-era killings of Armenians
    in Ottoman Turkey as genocide.

    Their Armenian-American backers are confident that the new House
    leadership will not seek to block the bill which is certain to
    anger Turkey and prompt strong objections from the administration of
    President George W. Bush.

    Its language is expected to be virtually identical with that of
    two resolutions that were overwhelmingly approved by the House
    International Relations Committee in September 2005. Their passage
    by the full House was subsequently thwarted by the White House and
    leaders of the then Republican majority in Congress. One of those
    resolutions was co-sponsored by 140 lawmakers and called on Bush to
    "accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation
    of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide."

    The new House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, is a longtime advocate of Armenian
    issues who has supported such resolutions in the past.

    "Prospects for [the passage of a genocide resolution] this year are
    certainly better than they have been in recent years," said Bryan
    Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America,
    a Washington-based lobbying group.

    Ardouny told RFE/RL that the draft resolution will be introduced later
    this month by the two co-chairmen of the congressional Armenian Caucus
    and two other congressmen known for their close ties with the Armenian
    community in the United States. He said that unlike its previous
    analogues, the new legislative measure is a mere "House resolution"
    that does not have to be endorsed by the U.S. Senate and signed into
    law by Bush.

    Ardouny insisted that its passage by the lower chamber of Congress
    would still amount to official U.S. recognition of the Armenian
    genocide. "I would certainly consider congressional recognition of
    the genocide to be official recognition," he said.

    The Armenian Assembly and other Armenian-American advocacy groups
    have for decades been campaigning for such recognition. They nearly
    succeeded in that endeavor in October 2000 when a last-minute
    intervention by then President Bill Clinton scuttled the almost
    certain adoption of a relevant congressional bill.

    "I think we have the best chance probably in a decade to get an
    Armenian genocide resolution passed," Congressman Adam Schiff, a
    California Democrat, was quoted by the Associated Press as saying
    late last month.
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