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House committee adopts Armenian genocide resolution

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  • House committee adopts Armenian genocide resolution

    The Jurist
    March 5 2010

    House committee adopts Armenian genocide resolution
    Matt Glenn at 7:35 AM ET


    [JURIST] The US House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs
    [official website] voted 23-22 Tuesday to adopt a resolution [H Res
    252 text] that recognizes the Ottoman Empire's treatment of Armenians
    between 1915 and 1923 as genocide [JURIST news archive]. In his
    opening remarks [text], committee chairman Howard Berman (D-CA)
    [official website], noted that every country must face uncomfortable
    issues its past, and continued, "[i]t is now time for Turkey to accept
    the reality of the Armenian Genocide." The non-binding resolution:

    calls upon the President in the President's annual message
    commemorating the Armenian Genocide issued on or about April 24, to
    accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of
    1,500,000 Armenians as genocide and to recall the proud history of
    United States intervention in opposition to the Armenian Genocide.

    Obama administration officials had urged the committee not to hold the
    vote [NYT report], fearing that such a resolution could damage
    relations with Turkey. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Teyyip Erdogan
    [official website, in Turkish] condemned the resolution [press
    release, in Turkish], denying the charges and warning the resolution
    could harm Turkey's relationship with the US and Armenia. Turkey also
    recalled its ambassador to the US Thursday. It is not known whether
    the full House of Representatives will vote on the resolution. A
    similar resolution was passed by the committee in 2007, but it never
    reached the House floor [JURIST reports].

    In October, Armenia and Turkey signed an accord [JURIST report]
    normalizing relations and opening the border between the two
    countries. Despite the apparent appeal of the agreement, there is
    opposition by factions in both countries. Many Armenian nationalists
    want Turkey to acknowledge the killings of 1.5 million Armenian
    citizens during World War I, which many refer to as the "Armenian
    Genocide" [BBC backgrounder]. Turkey has long disputed [Al Jazeera
    report] the numbers, and has said the killings were a result of a
    civil war that took place after the collapse of the Ottoman empire.
    Turkey has expressed concern over its ally Azerbaijan, which has been
    fighting [DW report] with Armenia over the breakaway region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan. Turkey closed its border to Armenia in
    1993 after Armenian separatists began fighting with Azerbaijani
    military to show its support for the preservation of Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity.
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