Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish Daily News On Armenian Genocide Bill: Troubles Threaten Turk

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

  • Turkish Daily News On Armenian Genocide Bill: Troubles Threaten Turk

    TURKISH DAILY NEWS ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL: TROUBLES THREATEN TURKEY

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    09.07.2007 14:24 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Cuneyd Zapsu, a top adviser to Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, stated that a secret meeting was held
    with Democratic Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy
    Pelosi this February on H. Res. 106 - the Armenian Genocide bill.

    Richard Holbrooke, a Democrat and a former top diplomat, arranged
    and attended the meeting. Holbrooke is known for his role in putting
    an end to the war in Bosnia as assistant to the Secretary of State
    in former president Bill Clinton's administration, Turkish Daily
    News reports. Zapsu voiced the Turkish government's concerns over
    the resolution, saying its passage by the House would seriously hurt
    bilateral ties with Ankara. The Pelosi-Zapsu meeting took place shortly
    after Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul also visited the U.S. capital in
    early February. But neither Gul nor three Turkish parliamentary teams
    visiting Washington one after another succeeded in their "struggle"
    against the bill and had talks with the House speaker.

    At the same time the newspaper reminds that a number of worrying
    developments are taking place in recent weeks for Turkey, since
    the number of representatives cosponsoring the measure in late June
    rose to 218 in the 435-member House. "Obtaining the support of 218
    lawmakers does not automatically enable the Armenians to force a
    House floor vote for the resolution, but means the overcoming of a
    psychological threshold. The resolution likely would reach the House
    floor agenda any time after early September, when Congress returns
    to work after a summer recess in August. But still this would come
    after critical parliamentary elections in Turkey on July 22," the
    newspaper underlines.
Working...
X