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Renewed Push For Genocide Bill

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  • Renewed Push For Genocide Bill

    RENEWED PUSH FOR GENOCIDE BILL
    By Lisa Friedman, Washington Bureau

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Nov 9 2006

    WASHINGTON - The e-mail early Wednesday from the Armenian National
    Committee of America was positively enthusiastic.

    "It's just past 1:30 a.m. on election night and I'm wide awake,"
    Chairman Ken Hachikian wrote to the organization's members as news
    networks projected the Democratic Party takeover in the U.S. House.

    Hachikian and others said they now see a hopeful future for passage
    of Armenian issues in Congress, including a hotly disputed resolution
    officially recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

    "Our chances are excellent," agreed Bryan Ardouny, executive director
    of the Armenian Assembly for America.

    The resolution, sponsored by Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, passed the
    House Foreign Relations Committee this year, but Republican Speaker
    Dennis Hastert blocked it from a full House vote.

    As recently as last week, Speaker-designate Nancy Pelosi, D-San
    Francisco, expressed support for the bill.

    "I think the prospects for passage of the genocide resolution just
    got much, much better," Schiff said.

    Armenians contend that the Ottoman Empire began an orchestrated
    slaughter in 1915 in which about 1.5 million Armenians were killed.

    Turkey denies that it was a genocide, saying about 300,000 were killed
    and noting that Armenians sided with invading Russian troops in the
    aftermath of World War I and took up arms against Turks.

    Bural Gengiz, president of the American Turkish Association of
    America, said he believes Pelosi will consider Turkey's alliance
    with the U.S. and its position as a NATO ally when the genocide issue
    next arises.

    Rep. David Dreier, R-Glendora, who co-sponsored the Armenian genocide
    resolution but did not push GOP leaders to bring it to the floor,
    was circumspect about predicting the bill's future.

    "There will clearly be a discussion on that," Dreier said.
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