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Armenia Hails US Committee's Backing Of 'Genocide' Bill

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  • Armenia Hails US Committee's Backing Of 'Genocide' Bill

    ARMENIA HAILS US COMMITTEE'S BACKING OF 'GENOCIDE' BILL

    ABC Online, Australia
    Oct 11 2007

    Armenia has hailed a controversial vote by a US House of
    Representatives committee branding the Ottoman Empire's World War I
    massacre of Armenians as genocide.

    "This is a very important step towards establishing justice," Armenian
    Foreign Ministry spokesman Vladimir Karapetian told AFP in Yerevan.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian meanwhile insisted in Brussels that
    "there is no doubt anywhere in the world about the events that took
    place in Turkey in 1915 and there is a consensual attitude towards
    those events."

    "The fact that Turkey has adopted a position of denial of genocide
    does not mean that it can bind other states to deny the historic
    truth as well," he added.

    The committee defied warnings from President George W Bush and Turkey's
    authorities, voting Wednesday in favour of the resolution by 27 votes
    to 21.

    In a statement on Thursday, the Turkish Government condemned the
    committee's action and warned against any move to take it to a full
    House vote.

    To do so, it added, would jeopardise a strategic partnership with an
    ally and friend and would be an "irresponsible attitude".

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

    Mr Kocharian is has expressed optimism about future dialogue.

    "We hope that this process will lead to full recognition by the United
    States of America of the effect of the Armenian genocide," said.

    The Armenian head of state said that his country's relations with
    Turkey could not be further worsened by the US vote, and he invited
    Turkey to launch a dialogue.

    "In our case, there is nothing that can be worsened or limited by
    the adoption of this resolution," he said.

    "We are ready for diplomatic relations without any preconditions and
    we are ready to start a very wide dialogue with Turkish partners on
    all possible issues of Turkish-Armenia relations," he added.

    The Armenians say 1.5 million of their kinsmen were killed from 1915
    to 1923 under an Ottoman Empire campaign of deportation and murder.

    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
    World War I.
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