Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Approval Of Nonbinding Resolution Not To Impact U.S.-Turkey Relation

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Approval Of Nonbinding Resolution Not To Impact U.S.-Turkey Relation

    APPROVAL OF NONBINDING RESOLUTION NOT TO IMPACT U.S.-TURKEY RELATIONS: BERMAN

    news.am
    March 4 2010
    Armenia

    Overwhelming majority of scientists, international experts are
    unanimous on the fact that 1915 events in Ottoman Empire were
    Genocide, said Howard Berman -- the U.S. House Foreign Affairs
    Committee Chairman, opening hearings on Genocide Resolution.

    He stated that Nobel Prize winner, Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk was
    persecuted in Turkey for recognizing the fact of Genocide. The
    Congressman stressed that archives of U.S., France, UK, and Russia,
    including Turkey's allies during World War I - Germany, Austria and
    Hungary contain materials proving the fact of Genocide.

    One of the scholars studying Holocaust said that Armenian Genocide
    resembles Holocaust. Moreover, in 1985 sub-commission of the UN
    Commission on Human Rights recognized that massacres of Armenians
    in Ottoman Empire are equal to Genocide, Berman noted. The Chairman
    stressed that over 20 countries as well as European Parliament
    recognized Genocide and U.S. must follow the lead. He also added that
    despite Turkey's statements about terrible consequences of Genocide
    recognition by Congress, approval of non-binding resolution cannot
    affect U.S.-Turkey relations.

    Congressman Ros-Lehtinen opposed the resolution, underlining that
    its passing will negatively impact Ankara.-Washington relations.
Working...
X