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Armenia to seek support for 'genocide' charges at CIS

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  • Armenia to seek support for 'genocide' charges at CIS

    Armenia to seek support for 'genocide' charges at CIS

    Turkish Daily News
    09 December 2004

    Yerevan is planning to push for a discussion on the alleged genocide at the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the former Soviet Union countries next year

    ANKARA – Turkish Daily News


    Armenia is planning to take the issue of recognition of an alleged
    genocide against Armenians at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire
    to the Parliamentary Assembly of the former Soviet Union states,
    a senior Armenian official said.

    Deputy Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Vahan Oganesian said Armenia
    would bring the issue to the attention of parliamentarians of the
    Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) in 2005, the year that marks
    the 90th anniversary of the alleged genocide.

    "This would be of significant benefit to us," he was quoted as saying
    in Yerevan by the Anatolia news agency.

    Turkey, which was created following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire,
    categorically rejects "genocide" charges and says there were killings
    on both Turkish and Armenian sides as the Ottoman Empire was trying to
    quell civil unrest caused by an Armenian uprising in Eastern Anatolia
    during World War I.

    Influential Armenian diaspora has successfully pushed for recognition
    of the alleged genocide in several European countries and in the
    European Parliament. The European Union, however, has dismissed calls
    to recognize the alleged genocide as a condition for Turkey to open
    EU accession talks.

    Oganesian, in a press statement in Yerevan, said there could be
    different consequences of bringing the issue onto the CIS agenda,
    emphasizing that there was no guarantee that the outcome would
    necessarily be in favor of Armenia.

    Turkey says Yerevan's cessation of support of Armenian diaspora
    efforts for worldwide recognition of the alleged genocide is one of
    the conditions for the normalization of ties with the land-locked
    country. Ankara is also in solidarity with Azerbaijan, whose territory
    in Nagorno-Karabakh is held under Armenian occupation, and keeps its
    border gate with Armenia closed.

    --Boundary_(ID_VNhKsX6g6VPJNyyQduRZCA)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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