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AlJazeera: US To Vote On Armenian 'Genocide'

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  • AlJazeera: US To Vote On Armenian 'Genocide'

    US TO VOTE ON ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE'

    Al-Jazeera
    March 4 2010
    Qatar

    Turkey says that the Armenian death toll has been inflated [EPA]

    A US congressional panel is to vote on a resolution declaring the
    killing of Armenians by Turkish forces during the First World War
    as genocide.

    The measure being put before the Foreign Affairs Committee is not
    binding but approval could send the bill to the full House for
    consideration.

    Turkey sought to put pressure on Washington ahead of Thursday's vote,
    saying that its adoption would damage strategic ties between the
    two countries.

    The committee approved a similar measure in 2007, but it was not
    brought to the House floor for a vote following intensive pressure
    by George Bush, the former US president.

    Turkish pressure

    Ahmet Davutoglu, Turkey's foreign minister, said on Thursday that
    the resolution could damage ties between the two Nato allies.

    Davutoglu said: "If it passes, then the [Barack] Obama [the US
    president] administration should try to prevent it from being voted
    by Congress."

    Abdullah Gul, the country's president, was reported to have phoned
    Obama late on Wednesday to discuss the matter.

    Turkey's Hurriyet newspaper said Gul had urged the US leader to use
    his influence to block the resolution.

    Nancy Pelosi, the House speaker, has said she will wait to see the
    result of the committee vote before deciding whether to bring it to
    the House floor.

    Diplomatic relations

    Armenian-US groups have for decades sought congressional affirmation
    of the killings as genocide.

    Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of the First World War, an event widely
    viewed by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Turkey denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll
    has been inflated and that many of those killed were victims of civil
    war and unrest.

    After decades of hostility, Turkey and Armenia signed a deal in
    October to establish diplomatic relations and open their border.

    But the process has hit the rocks, with Ankara accusing Yerevan of
    trying to tweak the terms of the deal and Armenia charging that Turkey
    is not committed on ratifying the accord.

    "We have taken very important steps for comprehensive normalisation
    in the Caucasus. It is necessary to avoid risking these efforts,"
    Davutoglu said.

    The minister did not say what Turkey would do if the bill was adopted,
    but a Turkish official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said "all
    options are on the table", including once again recalling Turkey's
    ambassador to the US.

    http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/20 10/03/201034152722170379.html
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