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ANKARA: ANCA places Turkey in `genocide axis' with Sudan

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  • ANKARA: ANCA places Turkey in `genocide axis' with Sudan

    TODAY'S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL
    Feb 23, 2009
    ANCA places Turkey in `genocide axis' with Sudan

    An influential Armenian-American group has stepped up its campaign for
    recognition of claims that 1.5 million Armenians were subjected to
    genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century,
    telling US congressmen that Turkey is part of an emerging "axis of
    genocide" with Sudan.

    The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) said in a statement
    that it had alerted members of Congress last week that "Ankara is
    playing an increasingly dangerous role in blocking decisive
    international action to end the genocide in Darfur," claiming that
    Ankara has been selling lethal weaponry to Sudan, providing diplomatic
    support for the Sudanese government in the face of international
    criticism over its Darfur policy and using its UN Security Council
    membership "to block anti-genocide efforts."

    Human rights groups criticize Turkey for its close ties with Sudan,
    whose leader, Omar al-Bashir, has been indicted at the International
    Criminal Court on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity in
    Darfur. Turkish leaders have avoided accusing Sudan of genocide,
    calling instead for an end to Darfur's "humanitarian tragedy."

    The American-Armenian lobby groups, of which ANCA is one of the
    strongest, have been pressuring the US Congress to pass a resolution
    recognizing their claims that World War I-era events in Anatolia
    constituted genocide. The pressure on the US administration is also
    high, as April 24, when Armenians say the genocide campaign started in
    1915, is approaching.

    American presidents issue messages on this day every year, but no
    president has ever used the word genocide in his message. Turks
    cheered election of Barack Obama as US president, but Ankara is wary
    that relations could receive a serious blow if he goes ahead with his
    election campaign promises and supports claims that up to 1.5 million
    Armenians were victims of a systematic genocide campaign in the
    Ottoman Empire.

    The "genocide axis" claims spread by ANCA are likely to upset Ankara,
    but the Turkish government may find a recent speech by a pro-Armenian
    congressman even more appalling. Republican Rep. Frank Pallone Jr.,
    co-chairman of the Armenian Caucus, said in a Feb. 13 speech on the
    House floor that Turkey was guilty of "hypocrisy" as it levels human
    rights charges against Israel for its Gaza operation in January while
    it continues to deny the "Armenian genocide." Rep. Pallone (D-NJ)
    sharply criticized Turkey's hypocrisy in leveling human rights charges
    against Israel even as it continues to deny the Armenian genocide and
    strengthen its ties to the genocidal Sudanese regime, ANCA
    reported. "For a nation that for 94 years has practiced wide-spread
    genocide denial of the killing of one-and-a-half million Armenians,
    hypocrisy runs deep today in Ankara," Pallone said, according to a
    statement from ANCA. "The Turkish people need to step back and
    question their skewed understanding of genocide. Look in the mirror,
    look at your own history, come to terms with the fact that 1.5 million
    Armenians died and when contemporary genocides, like Darfur, take
    place it must be denounced."
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