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Armenia hails US lawmakers' backing of 'genocide' bill

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  • Armenia hails US lawmakers' backing of 'genocide' bill

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 11, 2007 Thursday


    Armenia hails US lawmakers' backing of 'genocide' bill

    by Mariam Harutunian


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

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian said: "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 said, speaking in Brussels.

    The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee defied
    warnings from President George W. Bush and Turkey, voting Wednesday
    in favour of the resolution by 27 votes to 21.

    The Turkish government condemned the 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 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."

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

    He said his country's relations with Turkey could not be further
    worsened by the US vote and he invited Ankara to launch a dialogue.

    "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.

    In Yerevan, parliament speaker Tigran Torosian opened a session
    Thursday to warm applause as he thanked the US lawmakers.

    "I want, on behalf of all Armenian members of parliament, to express
    our gratitude to our American colleagues, who have shown high moral
    standards and did not succumb to pressure (from Turkey)," he said.

    Arpi Vardanian, a descendant of survivors and the head of the Yerevan
    office of the Armenian Assembly of America, called the vote "a major
    diplomatic victory."

    "Today is a happy day for Armenians all around the world," he said.
    "This victory is especially important in view of the unprecedented
    pressure and even threats made by Turkey to the American lawmakers."

    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.

    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.

    The dispute has been a major obstacle in relations between Turkey and
    Armenia, which have no diplomatic ties and whose border has remained
    closed for more than decade.

    Winning international recognition of the killings as genocide has
    been a major foreign policy goal of Armenia since gaining its
    independence following the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

    More than 20 countries have officially recognized the killings as
    genocide, including Belgium, Canada, Poland, Russia and Switzerland,
    as well as the European parliament.

    Armenia's arch-foe Azerbaijan, a Turkic Muslim country with close
    ties to Ankara, echoed Turkey's condemnation of the vote and also
    called on the House to reject the resolution.

    "This is very unfortunate and regretful," Azerbaijani foreign
    ministry spokesman Khazar Ibrahim told AFP. "The decision was based
    on very narrow domestic political considerations rather than US
    national interests and historic facts. ... We can only hope the full
    House will be more responsible."

    Azerbaijan and Armenia are locked in a territorial dispute over the
    ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorny Karabakh, which broke away from
    Azerbaijan during a war in the early 1990s.
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