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  • Rep. Cohen seeking Turkey meeting

    Commercial Appeal
    June 2 2007


    Cohen seeking Turkey meeting

    By Bartholomew Sullivan


    WASHINGTON -- U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., hopes that he succeeded
    in getting a major conference on U.S.-Turkey relations to come to
    Memphis during next year's Memphis in May International Festival.

    Cohen returned Friday from a fact-finding trip to Turkey underwritten
    by the German Marshall Fund of the United States, a Washington
    think-tank, and the Association of Former Members of Congress. He was
    reached by phone at the airport in Chicago.

    He said he learned a lot about issues roiling Turkey, but that the
    "most productive thing" was persuading the U.S.-Turkey Study Group to
    come to Memphis next year. That would mean a large group of Turkish
    and American politicians, academics and business leaders would come
    to town, with a substantial economic impact.

    "Memphis in May, as I understand it -- and it may not have been
    announced yet, but as I understand it -- Memphis in May is going to
    honor Turkey next year," he said. "I was promoting Memphis on the
    trip ... and I believe we're going to be able to bring the
    Turkey-U.S. Study Group to Memphis during Memphis in May."

    Cohen said he was lobbied by both sides on a resolution pending in
    Congress to condemn what some call the Armenian genocide of 1915. And
    he learned about the rights of the Greek, Armenian and Jewish
    minorities in a country that's more than 95 percent Muslim but whose
    government has been struggling to retain its secular convictions.

    He met with the Armenian patriarch, the Greek patriarch and the chief
    rabbinate and visited the Blue Mosque, as well, he said.

    In meetings with politicians and business leaders, he said he was
    told that Turkey hopes that Iraq remains one country, mainly because
    of Turkey's experience with the PKK, a Kurdish independence movement
    operating in the western parts of Turkey and in northern Iraq
    demanding a Kurdish state in the region.

    Washington correspondent Bartholomew Sullivan can be reached at (202)
    408-2726.

    http://www.commercialappeal.com/mca/local/articl e/0,2845,MCA_25340_5567058,00.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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