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Commons vote recognizes Armenian genocide "crime against humanity"

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  • Commons vote recognizes Armenian genocide "crime against humanity"

    www.recorder.ca
    The Canadian Press, 2004

    Commons vote recognizes Armenian genocide as "crime against humanity"
    ALEXANDER PANETTA

    OTTAWA (CP) - Canada became one of few countries to formally recognize the
    genocide of Armenian Turks during the First World War in a strongly worded
    motion adopted 153-68 in the House of Commons on Wednesday.

    Government members were discouraged from voting for the motion, which is
    sure to anger a Turkish government that has never recognized the massacre of
    1.5 million Armenians starting in 1915.

    Following a charged debate at their weekly closed-door caucus meeting,
    Liberal backbenchers voted massively in favour while the party's cabinet
    contingent rejected the Bloc Quebecois motion.

    Prime Minister Paul Martin was absent during the politically sensitive vote
    but Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham defended the government's
    opposition.

    The Turkish government has warned that recognizing the genocide could have
    economic consequences and Graham said he wanted to maintain good relations
    with Turkey.

    "Turkey is an important NATO ally in a region where it is a Muslim country
    with a moderate government," he said.

    "What we seek to do in our foreign policy is to encourage the forward
    dimension, we're forward-looking. We'd like our Armenian friends and our
    Turkish friends to work together to put these issues in the past."

    The motion read: "That this House acknowledges the Armenian genocide of 1915
    and condemns this act as a crime against humanity."

    The Turkish government rejects the charge of genocide as unfounded and says
    that while 600,000 Armenians died, 2.5 million Muslims perished in a period
    of civil unrest.

    Unlike the Liberal government most opposition MPs - including Conservative
    Leader Stephen Harper - voted in favour of the motion, which places Canada
    in a category of only about two dozen countries to have recognized the
    Armenian genocide.

    The United Nations has also recognized the massacre, and Armenians have been
    fighting for decades throughout the world for that sort of acknowledgement.

    One opposition critic labelled the prime minister "hypocritical" for
    promising more free votes and then forcing ministers to toe the line on such
    a matter of deep personal conscience.

    "It's a terrible double standard for Paul Martin to force his ministers to
    vote against it and not even show up himself," said Tory foreign affairs
    critic Stockwell Day.

    "That is a hypocritical double standard."

    Liberal Hedy Fry supported the motion but said it's important to note the
    atrocities were carried out under the Ottoman empire, which has faded into
    history and was long ago replaced by a modern Turkish state.

    "I think we need to recognize the past," she said.

    "I think it doesn't mean we've broken ties with the current regime in
    Turkey. They are our colleagues, they are our NATO allies. They are a
    moderate, Muslim government and I think we need to work with them.

    Recognizing what happened in the Ottoman empire shouldn't affect Canada's
    diplomatic relations with Turkey, she said.

    Fry and many other former Liberal cabinet ministers who are now backbenchers
    also voted in favour, including Martin Cauchon, Stephane Dion, Maurizio
    Bevilacqua, Lyle Vanclief, Lawrence MacAulay, Herb Dhaliwal and David
    Kilgour.

    © The Canadian Press, 2004
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