Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ankara; Backers Of Armenian Genocide Bill Reach Majority In Us Congr

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

  • Ankara; Backers Of Armenian Genocide Bill Reach Majority In Us Congr

    BACKERS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL REACH MAJORITY IN US CONGRESS

    Turkish Daily News , Turkey
    July 2 2007

    Majority of lawmakers in the United States House of Representatives,
    lower chamber of Congress, are now supporting a resolution calling
    for the recognition of World War I-era killings of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire as genocide, a U.S. Armenian group said.

    The number of lawmakers cosponsoring the measure last week rose to 218
    in the 435-member House, the Armenian National Committee of America
    (ANCA) said in astatement over the weekend.

    "We welcome the growth of Armenian genocide resolution cosponsors to
    the 218 threshold," said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "We
    look forward in the coming days and weeks to working with our chapters
    and activists across the country in maintaining and expanding the
    bipartisan majority in favor of the timely adoption of this human
    rights legislation."

    This is the first time an Armenian genocide bill's co-sponsors have
    ever reached a majority in the House, and is a worrying development
    for Turkey, which has been working since early this year to prevent
    the resolution's approval.

    Obtaining the support of 218 lawmakers does not automatically enable
    Armenians to force a House floor vote for the resolution, but means
    a psychological threshold.

    Another group of at least 218 representatives signing a separate and
    special petition calling for a floor vote is required to push House
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi to do that, and it would be hard for the Armenians
    to collect that number of signatures, because most Democrat lawmakers
    would not want to confront their congressional leader in this way.

    Hard times ahead for TurkeyBut Pelosi, who has so far declined to
    order action on the bill, may soon feel that the measure should be
    brought to a floor vote because a House majority supports it.

    The resolution, originally introduced in January by Democratic
    Representative Adam Schiff and Republican lawmaker George Radanovich,
    is presently pending at the House's Foreign Affairs Committee.

    Analysts said the resolution would likely reach the House floor agenda
    any time after early September, when Congress returns to work from
    a summer recess in August.

    But still this would fall behind critical parliamentary elections in
    Turkey on July 22.Top Turkish officials, including Foreign Minister
    Abdullah Gul, have lobbied against the measure's passage in visits
    to the U.S. capital since February.

    Ankara has warned that the resolution's approval in Congress could
    hurt ties with Washington beyond repair, including a disruption of
    some bilateral security arrangements.

    A similar resolution is also pending in the Senate, Congress' upper
    chamber, with 31 senators out of a total of 100 backing the measure.

    But the Armenians' efforts focus on moving on the House side
    first.Before last year's congressional elections in which the Democrats
    won a landslide victory, Pelosi had pledged to work for the passage
    of the genocide measure. But after the elections, she has adopted a
    more responsible position, Turkish diplomats said.
Working...
X