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  • Armenia Bill Sparks Concern

    ARMENIA BILL SPARKS CONCERN

    SBS - World News Australi
    Oct 11 2007

    US politicians have defied warnings by President Bush and Turkey by
    voting to label the Ottoman Empire's World War I massacre of Armenians
    as "genocide".

    To cheers and applause from emotional Armenians, including elderly
    wheelchair-bound survivors, the House of Representatives Foreign
    Affairs Committee voted for the resolution by 27 votes to 21.

    Mr Bush was unusually blunt in attacking the resolution, warning that
    it would trigger Turkish reprisals and undermine US efforts in Iraq,
    Afghanistan and the Middle East.

    The vote "may do grave harm to US-Turkish relations and to US
    interests in Europe and the Middle East," State Department spokesman
    Sean McCormack said.

    "Nor will it improve Turkish-Armenian relations or advance
    reconciliation among Turks and Armenians over the terrible events of
    1915," he said.

    The measure is likely to be sent on to a vote in the full
    Democratic-led House, where a majority has already signed on to
    the resolution.

    A parallel measure is in the Senate pipeline.

    Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America,
    lauded "a historic day" after the committee's vote.

    "It is long past time for the US government to acknowledge and affirm
    this horrible chapter of history - the first genocide of the 20th
    century, and a part of history that we must never forget," he said.

    The text says the killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians was a
    "genocide" that should be acknowledged fully in US foreign policy
    towards Turkey, along with "the consequences of the failure to realise
    a just resolution."

    While the American-Armenian community celebrated, Turkish President
    Abdullah Gul denounced the vote as "unacceptable", and accused the
    House members of sacrificing US interests to "petty games of domestic
    politics."

    Turkey's ambassador to Washington, Nabi Sensoy, told AFP the vote was
    "very disappointing", and called on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to
    refrain from bringing it to a full vote.

    Sensoy, who has personally lobbied more than 100 House members against
    the resolution, added that "those who said it won't do any harm,
    we will have to wait and see."

    Mr Bush said the resolution would do "great harm" to ties with Turkey,
    a Muslim-majority member of NATO whose territory is a crucial transit
    point for US supplies bound for Iraq and Afghanistan.

    According to the Armenians, 1.5 million of their kinsmen were killed
    from 1915 to 1923 under an Ottoman Empire campaign of deportation
    and murder that later encouraged Nazi leader Adolf Hitler's Holocaust
    against the Jews.

    Rejecting the genocide label, Turkey argues that 250,000 to 500,000
    Armenians, and at least as many Turks, died in civil strife when
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia during
    the war.

    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and Defence Secretary Robert
    Gates, also denounced the measure before the hearing, after veiled
    threats from Ankara that US access to a sprawling air base in southern
    Turkey could be denied.

    But despite the warnings, the resolution's backers warned the issue
    could not be ignored as they drew parallels to the Holocaust and the
    present-day bloodshed in the Sudanese region of Darfur.

    "We've been told the timing is bad," Democratic House member Gary
    Ackerman said in an emotional hearing that lasted nearly four hours.

    "But the timing was bad for the Armenian people in 1915."
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