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TelAviv: Knesset C'ttee Discusses Armenian Massacre

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  • TelAviv: Knesset C'ttee Discusses Armenian Massacre

    KNESSET C'TTEE DISCUSSES ARMENIAN MASSACRE

    Globes
    http://www.globes.co.il/serveen/globes/docview.asp?did=1000709930
    Dec 26 2011
    Israel

    The Prime Minister's Office is worried that the discussion will cause
    another diplomatic crisis with Turkey.


    The Knesset Education, Sports and Culture Committee is publicly
    discussing the Armenian genocide by the Ottomans in 1915 during World
    War I. The Prime Minister's Office is worried that the discussion
    will cause another diplomatic crisis with Turkey.

    Yesterday, National Security Council chairman Yaakov Amidror asked
    Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin to postpone the discussion to a less
    sensitive date, but Rivlin said that the discussion would go ahead
    as scheduled.

    "We have the moral duty to remember and commemorate the tragedy that
    befell the Armenian people," Rivlin said during the discussion. "We
    do not want to exploit a political situation to settle accounts with
    another country. It should be remembered that, since 1989, we, Haim
    Oron and I, have put the issue on the agenda every year to prevent
    the denial of the catastrophe that happened to another nation. We are
    now calling on the nations of the world not to deny the Holocaust of
    the Jewish people, and we, as Jews and human beings, have no moral
    right not to do the same to another nation. We are not talking about
    a political matter, but a moral matter of paramount importance."

    Rivlin admitted that, for years, the government had asked for the
    discussion on the Armenian genocide not to be held "due to Turkish
    sensitivities". He added, however, "There are no diplomatic exigencies
    for postponing this moral duty."

    Rivlin later clarified, "Diplomatic considerations, however important
    they may be, do not allow us to deny the catastrophe of another
    nation. We are not referring to the current Turkish government or to
    the current political situation, but to a historical event that should
    be made known so that it will not happen again. The State of Israel
    aspires to restore friendly relations with Turkey, and I do not see
    why the commemoration of the Armenian catastrophe should prevent this."

    Published by Globes [online], Israel business news

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