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Commons condemns Armenian genocide

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  • Commons condemns Armenian genocide

    The Globe and Mail, Canada
    April 22 2004

    Commons condemns Armenian genocide

    Liberal MPs were free to support motion, although Ottawa fears
    fallout from Turkey

    By JEFF SALLOT AND CAMPBELL CLARK

    OTTAWA -- The Commons last night condemned the Ottoman Empire's
    brutal treatment of Armenians nine decades ago as an act of genocide,
    a moral judgment that government officials fear will provoke painful
    economic retaliation by modern-day Turkey.

    Despite government warnings that more than $1-billion in potential
    contracts for Canadian companies is at stake, 78 backbench Liberal
    MPs broke ranks with the cabinet to approve a motion that says the
    House "acknowledges the Armenian genocide of 1915 and condemns this
    act as a crime against humanity."

    The non-binding motion, approved on a free vote 153-68, was a setback
    for Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham and a high-powered business
    lobby. Conservative ranks were also split on the issue, but the Bloc
    Québécois and the New Democrats voted for the motion.

    The Turkish government strongly objects to any suggestion that its
    imperial ancestors committed genocide during the First World War.
    Turkey cancelled multimillion-dollar defence contracts with France
    when the National Assembly adopted a similar Armenian genocide
    resolution in 2001.

    In the hours before last night's vote, the Canadian Chamber of
    Commerce vigorously lobbied MPs to consider the possibility that
    Bombardier Aerospace and SNC Lavalin could lose out to European
    competitors for megaprojects such as the extension of the Ankara
    subway system.

    Mr. Graham made the same point during a charged Liberal caucus
    meeting yesterday morning. Trade officials estimate the subway
    contract alone could be worth about $1-billion.

    "It's huge," said Bob Keyes, the Chamber's vice-president for
    international affairs.

    Lavalin is in the running to become the prime contractor on the
    subway extension. Bombardier, which produced the rail cars for the
    original subway, is believed to have the advantage in the bidding for
    the contracts for new subway rolling stock.

    Several Canadian mining companies are eyeing projects in Turkey.

    "These sorts of contracts do not come along every day," Mr. Keyes
    said.

    Timing is crucial, he said, noting that Turkish authorities are
    expected to decide who gets the subway work within the next 12
    months.

    In a letter to the MPs of all parties, the Chamber said that if the
    House adopted the motion, "there will be an immediate negative
    economic impact on Canadian firms and their ability to do business in
    Turkey."

    Despite the dire warning of the business lobby, Prime Minister Paul
    Martin allowed a free vote on the motion in line with a promise to
    the Liberal caucus to allow greater autonomy for backbenchers on
    issues that are not questions of confidence in the government.

    Filmmaker Atom Egoyan, one of Canada's best-known Armenians, made the
    film Ararat about the genocide. Yesterday he expressed his pleasure
    with the House decision.

    "What is amazing today is that it's law and it's something we can
    tell to the generations that are to come," he told the CBC.

    Bloc MP Madeleine Dalphond-Guiral introduced the motion. Ontario
    Liberal MP Sarkis Assadourian, who is of Armenian heritage, seconded
    it.

    "Armenians have been waiting for this justice to take place for 89
    years," Mr. Assadourian said. "If you don't address the issues of the
    past, then you're condemned to repeat them. If the Armenian genocide
    was condemned in 1915, I'm confident the Holocaust would not have
    taken place."

    Armenian groups around the world have been pushing for recognition of
    the 1915 events as an act of genocide.The Liberals have tried to
    finesse the issue on other occasions when it has been brought before
    Parliament.

    In 1999, the Chrétien Liberal government said it viewed the 1915
    events as a "calamity" that afflicted the Armenians, and "this
    tragedy was committed with the intent to destroy a national group in
    which hundreds of thousands of Armenians were subjected to atrocities
    which included massive deportations and massacres."

    But then prime minister Jean Chrétien and his ministers did not use
    the word genocide, the one word that most upsets the Turkish
    government.

    Mr. Graham urged caucus members yesterday to avoid inflaming Turkish
    passions, but he seemed prepared for the passage of the motion.

    Several hours before the vote, the Foreign Minister told reporters
    that he hoped the Turkish government would view the motion as an
    expression of the free will of individual members and not an official
    condemnation by the Canadian government. "Individual Parliamentarians
    are free to express their will."

    When asked directly whether the Armenians were the victims of
    genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire, Mr. Graham said, "it is
    best to allow historians to deal with these issues."

    Mr. Graham suggested the motion could create tension within the North
    Atlantic Treaty Organization at a time when Canada is trying to work
    with Turkey and other allies to provide security in war-ravaged
    Afghanistan.

    "We want our Turkish friends and our Armenian friends to put these
    issues in the past," Mr. Graham added.
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