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STOCKHOLM: Reinfeldt, Bildt Criticized For Not Adopting Genocide Res

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  • STOCKHOLM: Reinfeldt, Bildt Criticized For Not Adopting Genocide Res

    REINFELDT, BILDT CRITICIZED FOR NOT ADOPTING GENOCIDE RESOLUTION AS LAW

    SR International - Radio Sweden
    http://www.sr.se/cgi-bin/International/nyhe tssidor/artikel.asp?ProgramID=2054&format=1&am p;artikel=3560075
    March 15 2010

    Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt has spent Monday fending
    off criticism for his statements that the government won't adopt the
    resolution on Turkish genocide as part of its foreign policy.

    Social Democrat Sven-Erik Osterberg has now reported Reinfeldt's
    comments to the Committee on the Constitution to force the sitting
    government to adopt the parliament's new line on the alleged Turkish
    genocide in 1915, when over a million Armenians and other ethnic
    groups were killed.

    Reinfeldt told TT on Monday night that he's open to the prospect of
    the Committee reviewing his statements.

    "I have been very clear in that I regret the decision in the sense
    that it's bad timing given that a process of reconciliation is in the
    works. But we will naturally analyze the decision that the parliament
    has made," he said.

    Foreign Minister Carl Bildt has also been very critical of the
    parliament's Thursday decision, and has mirrored Reinfeldt's
    statements that the constitution doesn't force the government to
    adopt a parliamentary measure.

    Criticism of his actions has also come from the public sector. Hasan
    Dölek, chairman of the Turkish National Organization in Sweden,
    slammed Bildt for not personally trying to prevent parliament from
    voting "aye" on the genocide classification.

    "He has expressed regret about the decision to the Turkish prime
    minister but he didn't do anything himself," Dölek told news agency
    TT. "Carl Bildt wasn't even there in the parliament."

    But Carl Bildt dismissed the criticism, telling TT that he had worked
    for days to convince people to vote against the measure by pursuing
    individual talks with parliamentarians.

    "It led to the fact that the alliance parties came out in greater force
    this time than last year" when it came to voting the proposition down,
    Bildt maintains.

    Carl Bildt's surge of support was not enough to stymie the decision,
    however, and whether Turkey will forgive the Swedish parliament the
    vote and send back its ambassador remains to be seen.
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