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Clinton promises hard fight to block Armenian `genocide' resolution

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  • Clinton promises hard fight to block Armenian `genocide' resolution

    Clinton promises hard fight to block Armenian `genocide' resolution
    By DEUTSCHE PRESSE-AGENTUR

    Published: Mar 6, 2010 12:35 AM Updated: Mar 6, 2010 12:36 AM

    GUATEMALA CITY: The government of US President Barack Obama will work
    very hard to block the Armenian "genocide" resolution now working its
    way through US Congress, US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
    said Friday in Guatemala.

    Clinton told a press conference that the Obama Administration will
    seek to prevent the resolution from coming to a full vote in the House
    of Representatives.

    She had previously met with Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom in the
    last stage of a Latin American tour that has also taken her to
    Uruguay, Argentina, Chile, Brazil and Costa Rica.

    The US House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs committee Thursday
    passed the bill which recognizes the mass murders of Armenians during
    World War I as a "genocide."

    House speaker Nancy Pelosi must now decide whether to bring the
    non-binding resolution to a full vote. Ankara has warned that the
    bill's further progress could seriously damage ties between NATO
    allies Turkey and the US.

    The Obama administration has opposed the House resolution, saying it
    could disrupt ongoing reconciliation talks between Turkey and Armenia,
    which are strongly backed by the United States. In addition, Turkey is
    a key member of NATO, strategically placed within the Middle East.

    Obama telephoned Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on
    Wednesday to give reassurances.

    The Turkish ambassador to Washington, Namik Tan, was recalled to
    Ankara for consultations soon after the committee approved the
    resolution, with a narrow 23-22 vote.

    Armenians contend that up to 1.5 million of their own were
    systematically killed by the Ottoman Turks during World War I. Turkey
    has long denied the genocide claim, saying the number of Armenians
    killed was much lower and that the deaths were the result of violent
    turbulence that also affected other groups at the time.
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