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Bulgarian lawmakers reject Armenian 'genocide' resolutions

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  • Bulgarian lawmakers reject Armenian 'genocide' resolutions

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 17, 2008 Thursday 9:19 AM GMT


    Bulgarian lawmakers reject Armenian 'genocide' resolutions

    SOFIA, Jan 17 2008


    Bulgaria's parliament announced it had rejected Thursday four
    proposals by opposition lawmakers to officially recognise the Ottoman
    massacre of Armenians during World War I as genocide.

    Legislators voted against three draft resolutions and against issuing
    a declaration "condemning the genocide against the Armenian people
    within the Ottoman Empire," the parliamentary press office said.

    The proposals, tabled separately by the ultra-nationalist Ataka party
    and the right-wing parties Bulgarian People's Union and Union of
    Democratic Forces, were rejected by the Socialist-led ruling
    coalition.

    The coalition also includes a Turkish minority party, Movement for
    Rights and Freedoms, and the centrist NMSP party of former king
    Simeon Saxe Coburg.

    Almost a third of the lawmakers present in the 240-seat legislature
    abstained from the vote.

    "I do not believe that there is a deputy in this hall who is not
    aware what the physical destruction of over one million Armenians
    means, but the historical truth is one thing, and politics completely
    another," Socialist deputy Alexander Radoslavov said after the vote.

    According to the Armenians, 1.5 million of their kinsmen were killed
    from 1915 to 1917 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.

    A number of countries and official bodies, notably the European
    Parliament, France, Canada and a US House of Representatives
    committee, have labelled the killings genocide.

    But Bulgaria has several times refused to pass a "genocide"
    resolution for fear of sparking a diplomatic row with neighbouring
    Turkey.

    The Balkan state of 7.6 million people has an 800,000-strong Turkish
    minority population and is also home to over 10,000 descendants of
    Armenian refugees who fled the killings.
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