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U.S. Senate Panel Condemns Dink Murder

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  • U.S. Senate Panel Condemns Dink Murder

    U.S. SENATE PANEL CONDEMNS DINK MURDER

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    March 29 2007

    A U.S. Senate panel condemned on Wednesday the murder earlier this year
    of a prominent Turkish-Armenian editor, Hrant Dink, who had urged Turks
    to acknowledge the mass killings of Armenians on Turkish soil in 1915.

    The largely symbolic resolution approved by the Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee reopened the question of whether Congress should
    weigh in on the debate over whether the killings were genocide --
    a sensitive issue in Turkey, a key NATO ally.

    Armenia says some 1.5 million Armenians suffered genocide at Ottoman
    Turkish hands, but Turkey denies a systematic genocide of Armenians
    took place, saying large numbers of Christian Armenians and Muslim
    Turks died in inter-ethnic fighting during World War One.

    The Senate resolution that passed the committee on a voice vote does
    not explicitly refer to the killings as genocide, but observes that
    Dink, before his death, was subjected to legal action in Turkey for
    doing so. It condemns Dink's murder and urges the people of Turkey to
    "honor his legacy of tolerance."

    Dink was murdered by a Turkish nationalist gunman outside his Istanbul
    office in January; his funeral drew 100,000 mourners.

    Turkish diplomats do not look favorably on the Senate proposal, which
    can now go to the floor for a vote. "We don't see the benefit of such
    a resolution," said Tuluy Tanc, the minister-counselor at the Turkish
    Embassy in Washington.

    But the author of the Senate resolution, Foreign Relations Committee
    Chairman Joseph Biden, a Delaware Democrat, said he was not deterred
    by Turkish sensitivities. "A relationship that rests on a requirement
    of a denial of an historical event, is not a sound basis for a
    relationship," Biden told Reuters.

    Turkish officials, as well as members of the Bush administration, have
    expressed more concern about other resolutions pending in Congress,
    but it is unclear how quickly they may advance. Turkish Prime Minister
    Tayyip Erdogan warned last month that Congress would harm bilateral
    ties if it backs a resolution recognizing the 1915 mass killings of
    Armenians by Turks as genocide.

    Such a resolution has been introduced in the House by Rep. Adam Schiff,
    a California Democrat, and in the Senate by Assistant Majority Leader
    Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat. Schiff told Reuters that with
    Democrats now in charge of Congress, he believed his resolution had
    its "best chance in a decade" of passage.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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