Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

MEPs To Discuss Controversial 'Armenian Genocide' Report

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

  • MEPs To Discuss Controversial 'Armenian Genocide' Report

    MEPS TO DISCUSS CONTROVERSIAL 'ARMENIAN GENOCIDE' REPORT

    European Voice
    April 9, 2015

    Dave Keating [email protected]

    MEPs to debate how to define the Ottoman Empire's 1915 killing and
    forced relocation of Armenian subjects.

    The sensitive subject of how to define the Ottoman Empire's 1915
    killing and the forced relocation of its Armenian subjects will be
    up for debate at a single-day session of the European Parliament in
    Brussels on Wednesday (8 April).

    The resolution, entitled 'Armenian genocide 100th anniversary', builds
    on a report adopted last month by the EURONEST parliamentary assembly,
    which links the European Parliament with the national parliaments
    of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. The report
    "condemns all forms of crimes against humanity and genocide and deeply
    deplores attempts at their denial".

    It is unclear this week whether the resolution will have enough
    political support to pass, particularly if it uses the phrase
    "Armenian genocide". Twenty-two countries, along with the Council
    of Europe, have referred to the events of 1915 as a genocide. But
    such terminology does not enjoy universal acceptance, and has been
    condemned by the Turkish government. Martin Schulz, the president of
    the European Parliament, is today (9 April) in Turkey on an official
    visit to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    MEPs will also vote on a resolution recognising the one-year
    anniversary of the Bangladesh factory fires and assessing the progress
    of the Bangladesh Sustainability Compact, which is meant to discourage
    unsafe working conditions.

    A series of contentious debates and votes in committees next week
    includes a vote on Tuesday (14 April) by the committee on international
    trade on a new certification scheme for conflict minerals. The
    European Commission has proposed a voluntary certification system to
    cover extractive industries in war-torn areas, but MEPs are likely
    to call for a binding system. This will follow a debate in the same
    committee on Monday (13 April) on the EU-US free trade agreement, TTIP,
    currently being negotiated by the European Commission. On Monday,
    the environment committee will debate a report from the Commission
    on patient safety and superbugs, and on Tuesday it will vote on a
    controversial proposal to limit the use of biofuel.

Working...
X