Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

VoA: US House Speaker: Armenian Genocide Measure Will Go Forward

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • VoA: US House Speaker: Armenian Genocide Measure Will Go Forward

    Voice of America
    Oct 11 2007

    US House Speaker: Armenian Genocide Measure Will Go Forward

    By Dan Robinson
    Capitol Hill
    11 October 2007

    Robinson report - Download (mp3) 634k
    Listen to Robinson report


    The speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, says a
    resolution approved by a House committee this week characterizing the
    World War I-era killings of tens of thousands of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks as genocide will go to a vote in the House. VOA's Dan Robinson
    reports from Capitol Hill, President Bush wants the resolution
    stopped, saying it will harm relations with Turkey and U.S. interests
    in the region.


    Nancy Pelosi, 11 Oct 2007
    Speaking a day after the 27 to 21 vote in the foreign affairs
    committee approving the resolution, Pelosi reaffirmed her
    determination to see the measure come to a vote in the House.

    Some 224 House lawmakers have signed on in support of the resolution,
    which Pelosi and House majority leader Steny Hoyer say will be
    brought up at some point before the House is due to end its current
    session, likely next month.

    Pelosi told reporters at her weekly news conference that
    congressional resolutions on Armenian genocide have been put off,
    with various justifications, over the past 20 years.

    There is never a good time to acknowledge that genocide has taken
    place, Pelosi adds, whether in the distant past or the present.

    "While that may have been a long time ago, genocide is taking place
    now in Darfur, it did within recent memory in Rwanda, so as long as
    there is genocide there is need to speak out against it," said Nancy
    Pelosi.

    In the wake of the committee vote, Turkey temporarily recalled its
    ambassador in Washington for consultations, a traditional method of
    diplomatic protest.

    Speaking in Washington, Egemen Bagis, a member of Turkey's governing
    Justice and Development Party and advisor to Turkey's Prime Minister,
    called the House committee vote a mistake and warned of consequences.


    However, Congresswoman Pelosi hopes U.S.-Turkish relations will
    remain strong:

    "The U.S. and Turkey have a very strong relationship," she said. "It
    is based on mutual interest and I with all the respect in the world
    for the government of Turkey believe that our continued mutual
    interest will have us grow that relationship. This isn't about the
    Erdogan government [Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan], this is
    about the [former] Ottoman Empire."

    Pelosi dismissed suggestions of any connection between the House
    resolution moving forward and Turkish government plans for a possible
    military incursion into northern Iraq against Kurdish rebels.

    Wednesday's House committee vote highlighted the divisions across
    party lines on the resolution, with eight Democrats voting against
    and eight Republicans voting for the measure.

    At the White House, spokeswoman Dana Perino reiterated President
    Bush's hope that the resolution will go no farther in the House.

    "The president has expressed on behalf of the American people our
    horror at the tragedy of 1915, but at the same time we have national
    security concerns, and many of our troops and supplies go through
    Turkey," said Dana Perino. "They are a very important ally in the war
    on terror, and we are going to continue to try work with them and we
    hope that the House does not put forward a full vote."

    In its reaction, the State Department expressed regret over the House
    committee vote, saying it may do grave harm to U.S. - Turkish
    relations and U.S. interest in Europe and the Middle East.
Working...
X