Over 300 Egypt MPs Call on Parliament to ‎Recognize Armenian Genocide

CAIRO, Egypt (Ahram)—Independent Egyptian Member of Parliament (MP) Mostafa Bakri said that ‎he and 336 MPs have called on the Egyptian Parliament ‎to approve a draft resolution in favor of ‎recognizing the death of 1.5 ‎million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman state in 1915 as a ‎‎”genocide.” ‎

Egypt's Parliament (Photo: Middle East Eye)
Egypt’s Parliament (Photo: Middle East Eye)


“Parliament must hold a special session on ‎this subject because it was a crime of mass ‎extermination that should be ‎condemned by all world parliaments,” said ‎Bakri.‎

“New historical evidence has ‎exposed the slaughter of 1.5 million ‎Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks ‎between 1915 and 1922,” Bakri said, adding that his proposal “comes after the German ‎Parliament voted last month in favor of ‎recognizing the 1915 massacre as ‎a genocide, and many other countries ‎are expected to follow suit.”

Bakri concluded that “while the Ottomans ‎committed the 1915 massacre, the Erdogan regime is now moving to commit ‎another crime against his political ‎opponents and minorities that seek ‎independence.”‎

The proposal comes after another Egyptian ‎MP, Emad Mahrous, demanded on Sunday that the ‎government grant political ‎asylum to exiled Turkish opposition figure ‎Fethullah Gulen. ‎

Mahrous accused Erdogan of exploiting the failed coup ‎against him this month to detain hundreds ‎of his political opponents and turn Turkey ‎into a Muslim Brotherhood dictatorship. ‎

Talaat Khalil, an MP who supported Bakri’s ‎draft resolution, told reporters that ‎genocide should be condemned by ‎all world governments and parliaments. ‎‎

“Besides, the perpetrators ‎must admit their crimes or even apologize ‎for them,” Khalil added.

‎”But it is clear that the arrogant Erdogan ‎regime will never admit that this massacre [took place] because he believes himself to be a new ‎Ottoman Sultan,” said Khalil. ‎

Khalil added that Egypt has close relations with both the ‎Armenian people and the Turkish people. ‎

‎”Egypt has always been a shelter for the ‎Armenians since the 1915 massacre,” said ‎Khalil, arguing that “out of its political ‎responsibility, Egypt’s Parliament must move ‎to recognize the [genocide] against ‎Armenians.”‎

Khalil concluded by saying that “this should ‎not be taken as a hostile move by the ‎Egyptian Parliament against Turkey, but ‎should be seen as a move that comes out ‎of purely humanist considerations.”‎

Relations between Turkey and Egypt have been strained since the 2013 ouster of Egypt’s Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood group and a close ally of Erdogan’s AKP government. Erdogan has repeatedly slammed Morsi’s removal as an “unacceptable coup.”

Cairo has repeatedly accused Ankara of “interference” in its domestic affairs and supporting Islamist militants who carry out terrorist attacks in Egypt.

Turkey provides a safe haven for leading members of the Muslim Brotherhood, which has been banned in Egypt. Ankara also allows TV stations run by sympathizers of the Brotherhood who criticize the government of President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi to broadcast out of Turkey.

Guest Contributor

Guest Contributor

Guest contributions to the Armenian Weekly are informative articles or press releases written and submitted by members of the community.

3 Comments

  1. I’m all for it, as long as the recognition of the AG is not driven only by political reasons. Egypt and Turkey do not see eye to eye on many issues. But in recent years, Egyptian TV has produced numerous documentaries on the Armenian Genocide, and has sent journalists to Armenia proper. Whatever the reason is, speedy recognition will be highly appreciated by all Armenians, even if our community down there has shrunk considerably. Thank you Egypt, and shame on Israel for considering the supply of arms to Azerbaijan in exchange of oil & gas, more important than recognizing the first genocide of the 20th Century.

  2. while ancient Armenia was providing pharo Egypt with horses now modern day Egypt provides the world with humanisme

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