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Turkey Criticizes U.S. Resolution On Murdered Armenian Journalist

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  • Turkey Criticizes U.S. Resolution On Murdered Armenian Journalist

    TURKEY CRITICIZES U.S. RESOLUTION ON MURDERED ARMENIAN JOURNALIST

    Orange County Register, CA
    March 29 2007

    We are seeking comments from the Orange County Armenian and Turkish
    community on a U.S. Senate panel resolution today condemning the
    murder in January of prominent Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink.

    Turkey has criticized the largely symbolic resolution, but according
    to Reuters, a more potent action by the U.S. Congress could come
    next month as it weighs whether to debate and back a bill that would
    recognize the Armenian massacres by Ottoman Turks as genocide.

    In January Register reporter Tamara Chuang wrote about a Costa Mesa
    service for the Armenian journalist. More than 300 people attended
    that vigil at the St. Mary Armenian Church. The 52-year-old editor
    of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, was called a hero for
    writing about the mass killings of Armenians upon the breakup of the
    Ottoman Empire in the early 1900s.

    Many in OC's Armenian community considered Dink a friend and brother.

    We will update this entry with comments from the community as they
    become available.

    Below is a Reuters story on today's Senate panel resolution:

    Turkey chides US Senate panel over Dink resolution

    ANKARA, March 29 (Reuters) - Turkey chided a U.S. Senate panel on
    Thursday for backing a resolution condemning the murder in January
    of prominent Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink, saying the bill was
    politically motivated. The mainly symbolic resolution, which can now
    pass to the floor of the Senate for a vote, has angered Ankara as
    it makes a reference to the mass killings of Armenians in 1915 and
    mentions that Dink had faced legal action for writing about them.

    The resolution, backed by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
    took place as the U.S. Congress weighs whether to debate and back a
    much more explosive bill that would recognise the Armenian massacres
    by Ottoman Turks as genocide.

    "It is clear that bringing this resolution (on Dink's killing) to the
    agenda of the Senate serves only to exploit the loathsome murder for
    political aims by referring to the events of 1915," Turkey's Foreign
    Ministry said in a statement.

    The ministry noted the government had strongly condemned Dink's murder
    and that large numbers of Turks had taken to the streets of Istanbul
    at his funeral to show their revulsion.

    Dink was shot dead outside his Istanbul office by a young Turkish
    ultra-nationalist, who later said he had killed Dink for "insulting"
    Turkey. Several other men have been arrested in connection with
    the killing.

    Before his death, Dink had been prosecuted under a controversial
    law for his writings on the Armenian massacres, a highly sensitive
    subject in Turkey.

    Turkey denies Ottoman forces committed a systematic genocide against
    Armenians during World War One. It says large numbers of both
    Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks died in inter-ethnic fighting
    as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has warned of serious damage to
    U.S.-Turkish relations if Congress backed the genocide resolution
    next month.

    Many other parliaments around the world have passed similar resolutions
    acknowledging the Armenian killings as genocide.

    http://blogs.ocregister.com/ocworld/200 7/03/turkey_criticizes_us_resolutio_1.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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