Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: US Federal Appeals Court Revisits 'Armenian Genocide' Lawsui

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

  • ANKARA: US Federal Appeals Court Revisits 'Armenian Genocide' Lawsui

    US FEDERAL APPEALS COURT REVISITS 'ARMENIAN GENOCIDE' LAWSUIT

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 8 2011
    Turkey

    Armenians demonstrate to remember what they call the "genocide" for
    tragic events in 1915 when up to 1.5 million Armenians are claimed
    to be killed at the hand of Ottomans. (Photo: Reuters)

    A federal appeals court on Monday took up the thorny issue of whether
    California law declaring there was an Armenian genocide in Turkey
    conflicts with US foreign policy.

    At issue is a state law that labels the deaths a genocide, allowing
    heirs of Armenians killed in the Turkish Ottoman Empire to pursue a
    lawsuit seeking life insurance payments from three German insurers.

    It's the third time in two years the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals
    has confronted the politically charged question. In a rare move,
    the court reversed itself last year after a judge changed her mind
    and turned a 2-1 ruling rendered in 2009 in favor of insurers into
    a 2-1 decision supporting the heirs' lawsuit.

    On Monday, the court's chief justice announced in a brief statement
    that a majority of judges had voted to rehear the case - a move that
    wipes out the 2010 decision.

    The insurers, which include Munich Re AG, argue California's law
    should be struck down because it conflicts with US foreign policy,
    which they say sides with Turkey in refusing to call the Armenian
    deaths genocide. Turkey describes the deaths as resulting from civil
    unrest that accompanied the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    The insurers point to decisions by former presidents Bill Clinton
    and George W. Bush to defeat congressional legislation that would
    have recognized an Armenian genocide.

    Lawyers for the heirs argue those presidential views are not official
    policy. They say the United States lacks a formal position, which
    means the California law is not in conflict with any national policy.

    Armenians claim that up to 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered at
    the hands of Ottoman Turks in 1915, but Turkey rejects the allegations,
    saying that the number is inflated and that both sides suffered
    losses. Nearly a million ethnic Armenians live in California and
    constitute large portion of the electorate in the southern part of
    the state.

Working...
X