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US to debate Turkey genocide bill

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  • US to debate Turkey genocide bill

    BBC
    2007/10/10

    US to debate Turkey genocide bill

    A key US congressional committee is to debate whether to classify as
    genocide the deaths of 1.5 million Ottoman Armenians between 1915 and
    1917.

    Turkey - which strongly denies Armenian claims that the killings
    amounted to genocide - has warned of "serious consequences" if the
    bill is passed.

    Ankara has threatened to restrict US access to a key military base
    used for its operations in Iraq.

    Arms deals between the two countries could also be cancelled.

    The bill must pass in the foreign affairs committee before it can be
    debated on the floor of the House of Representatives.

    Even if it passes and is then adopted by the House, the bill would not
    be binding.

    Mood hardening

    But the BBC's Sarah Rainsford, in Istanbul, says such a nuance will
    have little impact on the reaction in Turkey.

    Ankara has pulled out all the stops to prevent the genocide resolution
    reaching Congress for a vote, she adds.

    Unfriendly gestures [may need to be] countered by equally unfriendly
    and punitive gestures on the part of Turkey
    Iltier Turan
    Turkish political analyst
    Politicians have travelled to Washington to lobby lawmakers, while the
    country's prime minister and president have both contacted US
    President George W Bush.

    In his letter, Turkish President Abdullah Gul "drew attention to the
    serious problems that will emerge in bilateral relations if the bill
    is adopted," his office said in a statement.

    An official government statement warned of the possibility of
    demonstrations and "other manifestations of anti-Americanism
    throughout Turkey" if the bill is passed.

    Turkish political analyst Iltier Turan said the government in Ankara
    could feel obliged to act if the bill is approved.

    "Any Turkish government will be compelled to demonstrate very
    concretely to the Turkish public that the Americans' unfriendly
    gestures are countered by equally unfriendly and punitive gestures on
    the part of Turkey," he said.

    All this comes on top of mounting anger that the US is not doing
    enough to counter the Kurdish separatist PKK, which mounts deadly
    attacks on Turkey from inside Iraq, our correspondent says.

    Long campaign

    Ankara rejects Armenian claims that the deaths of some 1.5 million
    Armenians from 1915-17 amounted to genocide.

    Turkey admits that many Armenians were killed, but says the deaths
    were a result of widespread wartime fighting in Turkey during World
    War I.

    Armenians have long campaigned for the killings to be recognised
    internationally as genocide. Some countries have done so.

    Last year Turkey cut military co-operation with France after the
    French parliament passed a bill to make denial of the Armenian
    genocide an offence - even though it never became law.

    If the US bill is approved, Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi may allow
    a vote on the floor.

    However, it would have no binding effect on US foreign policy, and
    similar bills in 2000 and 2005 were blocked by senior US politicians.

    Published: 2007/10/10 09:38:15 GMT

    (c) BBC MMVII

    Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/703 7048.stm
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