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Backers Of Armenia Genocide Bill Agree To Delay Vote

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  • Backers Of Armenia Genocide Bill Agree To Delay Vote

    BACKERS OF ARMENIA GENOCIDE BILL AGREE TO DELAY VOTE

    Agence France Presse
    Oct 26 2007

    WASHINGTON, Oct 25, 2007 (AFP) - Backers of a bill in the US Congress
    labeling massacres of Armenians as "genocide" Thursday bowed to White
    House pressure and agreed to delay the measure, which had sparked fury
    in Turkey. Four key sponsors of the bill, censuring the Ottoman Empire
    for the World War I killings, asked House of Representatives speaker
    Nancy Pelosi not to hold a debate on the issue. Despite signs that
    support for the measure had waned in recent days, its main sponsors,
    Democrats Adam Schiff, Brad Sherman, Anna Eshoo and Frank Pallone,
    said it still had significant backing in Congress. "We believe that
    a large majority of our colleagues want to support a resolution
    recognizing the genocide on the House floor, and they will do so,
    provided the timing is more favorable," they said in a letter to
    Pelosi. President George W. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza
    Rice had repeatedly called on the House Democratic leadership to pull
    the bill, fearing lasting damage with Turkey, a key US military and
    diplomatic ally. But Pelosi had resisted pressure to pull the bill
    from the chamber, and had said she was determined it would go to
    a vote, buoying Armenian exiles who have pressed for years for the
    measure. Democrats argued that by refusing to condemn the Armenian
    massacres as "genocide" the United States will encourage impunity
    for current and future crimes against humanity, for example the
    killings of civilians in Darfur. Republican House minority leader
    John Boehner welcomed the move to pull the bill, but said the whole
    episode reflected badly on the Democratic leadership and "calls
    their judgment into question." "Let's be clear: the suffering the
    Armenian people endured was tragic, there is no doubt about that,"
    he said in a statement. "But this 90-year-old issue should be settled
    by historians, not by politicians." Armenians say at least 1.5 million
    of their people were killed from 1915 to 1917 under what they describe
    as an campaign of deportation and murder by the Ottoman Empire. Turkey
    bitterly disputes the number of dead and the characterization of the
    killings as a genocide. Although the resolution is only symbolic,
    Turkey recalled its ambassador to Washington week and called off
    visits to the United States by at least two of its officials. The
    angry reaction has fueled fears within the US administration that it
    could lose access to a military base in Turkey, a NATO ally, which
    provides a crucial staging ground for US supplies headed to Iraq and
    Afghanistan. The House of Representatives Foreign Affairs committee
    held an intense debate on the resolution on October 11, and passed
    it to the House floor. It had been expected to come to a vote in
    November in the full House, but as its potential geopolitical impact
    became known, it started to lose support, even among some Democratic
    members of the House.
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