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Sofia: Bulgaria's Parliament Turns Down Resolution On Armenian Genoc

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  • Sofia: Bulgaria's Parliament Turns Down Resolution On Armenian Genoc

    BULGARIA'S PARLIAMENT TURNS DOWN RESOLUTION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Sofia Echo
    http://www.sofiaecho.com/2012/01/11/1742599_bulgarias-parliament-turns-down-resolution-on-armenian-genocide
    Jan 11 2012
    Bulgaria

    The latest attempt by Bulgarian ultra-nationalist party Ataka to
    ask the country's Parliament to recognise the Armenian genocide was
    defeated in the House on January 11 2012.

    Vehemently rejected as historically valid by Turkey, the "Armenian
    genocide" refers to events during conflicts from 1915 as the Ottoman
    empire neared its end.

    The issue of the Armenian genocide has troubled Turkey's bilateral
    relations with Armenia for several years. Where countries recently have
    formally recognised the Armenian genocide or moved towards doing so -
    lately including Sweden in 2010, a US congressional committee and in
    recent weeks, France - Ankara has responded with protests including
    severing or limiting diplomatic and economic ties.

    The municipalities of a number of Bulgarian cities, among them Plovdiv,
    Varna, Bourgas and Stara Zagora, have approved resolutions recognising
    the Armenian genocide but over the years, similar resolutions in
    Parliament have failed.

    This was the case on January 11, as the National Assembly - Bulgaria's
    unicameral legislature - resumed business for the New Year.

    Volen Siderov, leader of Ataka, a party whose platform includes an
    overall anti-Turkish stance against the background of the centuries
    of Ottoman rule of Bulgaria, said that it was natural for a "patriotic
    party" such as his to recognise the Armenian genocide.

    "To hide certain aspects of history because they are not good for
    you as a country is, to me, demagoguery," Siderov said.

    He said that Ataka's resolution was not an attempt to politicise
    the issue or to tread into the field of natural history, but was
    a proposal based on reason, the necessity to recognise unpleasant
    moments in history.

    The Movement for Rights and Freedoms, a minority party led and
    supported in the main by Bulgarians of Turkish ethnicity, objected
    strongly to Parliament being asked to deal with the issue.

    It was not the function of Parliament to decide historical truth,
    senior MRF MP Lyutvi Mestan said. The draft resolution was intended
    to force a mandatory way of thinking, he said.

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