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Turkey warns U.S. not to pass Armenian genocide bill

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  • Turkey warns U.S. not to pass Armenian genocide bill

    Turkey warns U.S. not to pass Armenian genocide bill

    The Associated Press
    Sunday, October 7, 2007

    ISTANBUL: The head of Parliament has warned the United States Congress
    not to pass an Armenian genocide bill, saying in a letter to the House
    speaker that the move would harm bilateral ties, his office said
    Sunday.

    The speaker of Parliament, Koksal Toptan, said in his letter to the
    speaker, Nancy Pelosi, that "it might take decades to heal negative
    effects" of the bill if it passed, Toptan's office said in a
    statement.

    The bill would declare the killings of Armenians from 1915 to 1917 a
    genocide, although it would have no binding effect on U.S. foreign
    policy. The House Foreign Affairs Committee is expected to consider
    the legislation this week.

    Toptan's letter said the passing of the bill would be declared by
    Armenians as a confirmation of their view of the historical dispute.

    "Then it will be difficult to control the dynamics triggered by
    Turkish public reaction," it said.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told President George W. Bush on
    Friday that the measure would "harm the strategic partnership" between
    the two countries.

    Toptan said Armenia did not respond positively to the Turkish proposal
    to establish a commission of historians to examine archives and to
    share their findings with the public.

    Armenians say more than 1.5 million of their people were killed in a
    systematic genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire during World
    War I, before the birth of modern Turkey, in 1923.

    Turkey says that the death toll is inflated and that the deaths
    occurred at a time of civil unrest.

    After France voted last year to make the denial of the Armenian
    genocide a crime, the Turkish government ended military ties. A
    similar move with the United States could have repercussions on
    operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, which rely heavily on Turkish
    support.

    Source: http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/07/news/turkey .php
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