Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ISTANBUL: Ambassador to US back in Turkey following "genocide" recog

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

  • ISTANBUL: Ambassador to US back in Turkey following "genocide" recog

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    March 6 2010

    Turkish Ambassador to US back in Turkey following "genocide" recognition

    Saturday, March 6, 2010
    ISTANBUL - Daily News with wires


    Turkey's Ambassador to Washington D.C. Namık Tan arrived in Istanbul
    on Saturday after being recalled to Turkey for consultations following
    the decision of a U.S. congressional panel approving a resolution on
    Armenian allegations regarding the incidents of 1915.

    The resolution calling the events of 1915 a genocide passed the House
    of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs in a 23-22 vote on
    Thursday.

    Tan made a short statement to reporters after his arrival. "As you
    know I have been recalled for consultations," he said. He will meet
    with officials, including the president, prime minister and foreign
    affairs ministers, for consultations, Tan said. "After the
    consultations, I will return when it is deemed fit," he said. Tan
    landed in Istanbul and is expected to go to Ankara.

    Shortly after the measure passed the committee voting, the Turkish
    government said in a statement that Ambassador Namık Tan was being
    recalled to Ankara for consultations.

    "We condemn this resolution which charges the Turkish nation with a
    crime that it did not commit," the statement said.

    Turkish government also expressed concern that the non-binding
    resolution could damage Turkish-U.S. relations and efforts to
    normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia.

    Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols last October to normalize
    relations, however, parliaments of the two countries have not passed
    them yet.

    Turkey strongly rejects genocide allegations and regards the events as
    civil strife in wartime that claimed the lives of many Turks and
    Armenians.
Working...
X