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Protest At US Bill Branding Turkish Past As 'Genocidal'

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  • Protest At US Bill Branding Turkish Past As 'Genocidal'

    PROTEST AT US BILL BRANDING TURKISH PAST AS 'GENOCIDAL'

    Evening Echo, Ireland
    Oct 11 2007

    Turks took to the streets today in protest at an American decision
    to continue with a bill which describes the 90-year-old mass killings
    of Armenians as genocide.

    Despite intense lobbying by Turkish officials and opposition by
    President Bush, the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed the bill
    by a 27-21 vote.

    Mr Bush had warned that it could harm US-Turkish relations, which
    are already tense with Turkey considering a military offensive into
    Iraq against Kurdish rebels. The US fears that could destabilise one
    of the few relatively peaceful areas in the country.

    At the centre of the issue is a claim that up to 1.5 million Armenians
    were killed in a systematic genocide between 1915-17, before modern
    Turkey was born in 1923.

    Turkey says the killings occurred at a time of civil unrest as the
    Ottoman Empire was falling apart, and that the numbers are inflated.

    "Unfortunately, some politicians in the US have once again sacrificed
    important matters to petty domestic politics despite all calls to
    common sense," Turkey's President Gul said after the US vote.

    Mr Bush had urged Congress to reject the legislation, and Secretary
    of State Condoleezza Rice and Defence Secretary Robert Gates also
    expressed concern.

    Passing the measure "at this time would be very problematic for
    everything we are trying to do in the Middle East," Ms Rice said
    hours before the vote.

    The US Embassy in Ankara meanwhile urged Americans to be alert for
    possible violence after the vote.

    US Ambassador Ross Wilson said he regretted the committee's decision,
    and said he hoped it would not be passed by the House.
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