Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Israeli Knesset Refused To Discuss Draft Armenian Genocide Resolutio

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

  • Israeli Knesset Refused To Discuss Draft Armenian Genocide Resolutio

    ISRAELI KNESSET REFUSED TO DISCUSS DRAFT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION IN NOD TO TURKEY

    Arminfo
    2007-03-15 14:04:00

    The members of the Israeli Knesset refused to discuss the draft
    Armenian Genocide Resolution in nod to Turkey.

    As the Haaretz.com reports, the Knesset decided yesterday to shelve
    a proposal for a parliamentary discussion on the Armenian genocide,
    in compliance with Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's request.

    Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni had also asked for a removal of
    MK Haim Oron's (Meretz) proposal from the agenda of the Knesset
    Education, Culture, and Sports Committee. She said the discussion
    might destabilize diplomatic relations with Turkey, which denies
    responsibility for the death of nearly 1 million Armenians during World
    War I. MK Oron said that before the vote, Livni called him twice to
    ask him to withdraw the proposal. "This inquiry is something we owe
    the Armenians, primarily at a time when we are struggling to preserve
    the memory of our own people," said Oron.

    He added that he had intended the discussion to lead to a resolution
    by the Knesset acknowledging the genocide perpetrated against the
    Armenians by the Turkish security forces. Prominent members of the
    Armenian community in Israel observed the vote from the Knesset
    visitors' balcony and expressed their disappointment with the decision.

    Health Minister Yacov Ben-Yizri, speaking for Livni, said that "as Jews
    and Israelis we are especially sensitive to the issue, but over the
    years the subject has been transformed into a heated discussion that
    the two parties must resolve in order to truly heal the wounds of the
    past." In his address, Ben Yizri did mention that the Armenians were
    "killed en-masse during the last days of the Ottoman.
Working...
X