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US Congress Delays Armenia Vote

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  • US Congress Delays Armenia Vote

    US CONGRESS DELAYS ARMENIA VOTE
    By Agencies

    MWC News
    Oct 26 2007
    Canada

    CULTURE

    Turks had marched in protest against the bill [EPA] The authors
    of a US congress bill to formally label the World War One massacre
    of Armenians by Turks a genocide have agreed to delay the measure,
    which had sparked fury in Turkey. The White House had called for the
    scrapping the bill, which passed the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    on October 10, fearing relations with Turkey would be damaged. The
    sponsors of the bill wrote to Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House of
    Representatives, on Thursday asking her not to hold a debate. Turkey
    had recalled its ambassador in protest at the committee passing the
    bill and threatened a reduction in military co-operation if the house
    passed it. Armenians say at least 1.5 million people were killed
    from 1915 to 1917 in what they say was a campaign of deportation and
    murder by the Ottoman Empire. Turkey bitterly disputes the number of
    dead and the characterisation of the killings as a genocide. Judgment
    questioned Despite signs that support for the controversial resolution
    had waned in recent days, the bills Democrat authors - 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 recognising the genocide
    on the house floor, and they will do so, provided the timing is more
    favourable," the letter said. Democrats argued that by refusing to
    condemn the Armenian massacres as "genocide" the US will encourage
    impunity for current and future crimes against humanity, for example
    the killings of civilians in Darfur. John Boehner, the Republican
    House minority leader, 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."
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