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AAA: Reference to Armenian Genocide Clouded by Turkish Influence

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  • AAA: Reference to Armenian Genocide Clouded by Turkish Influence

    Armenian Assembly of America
    122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
    Washington, DC 20001
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    April 2, 2004
    CONTACT: David Zenian
    E-mail: [email protected]

    ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY: REFERENCE TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CLOUDED BY TURKISH
    INFLUENCE

    Washington, DC -- The Armenian Assembly this week called on Secretary of
    State Colin Powell to re-examine his Department's most recent human rights
    report on Turkey, clarify repeated incorrect references to the Armenian
    Genocide and unequivocally distance itself from the Turkish policy of
    denial.

    Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian said the Assembly was
    "greatly troubled" by the use of the words "alleged" and "allegation" in
    contexts which seem "unquestionably influenced by Turkish assuage clouding
    State Department reporting."

    "The Armenian Assembly urges you to re-clarify that the use of the words
    'alleged' and 'allegations' ... do not reflect an official Department of
    State position," Barsamian said in his letter.

    Under Section 2(a) and again under Section 5 of the Department's report
    entitled "Turkey: Country reports on Human Rights Practices for the Year
    2003," the authors of the report spoke of "the alleged genocide of Armenians
    under the Ottoman Empire" and "allegations that the Ottomans committed
    genocide against Armenians."

    Both sections cited gross violations of human rights in Turkey, including a
    demand by the Turkish Ministry of Education that fifth and seventh-grade
    students, including Armenians, prepare a one-page essay - in the words of
    the State Department report - "arguing that allegations that the Ottomans
    committed genocide against the Armenians are 'baseless.' "

    The report was released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
    and submitted by the Department to Congress by the department of State on
    February 25, 2004.

    Barsamian said while as far back as 1982 the State Department had clarified
    similar language by adding a footnote to explain that it was "not intended
    as statements of policy of the United States ... Nor did they represent any
    change in U.S. policy," similar errors appeared in the Department's most
    recent human rights report on Turkey.

    "In fact," Barsamian said in his letter to Powell, "prior to 1982, the
    Department of State squarely acknowledged the Armenian Genocide and
    recommended that Turkey acknowledge the crimes against humanity."


    The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based nationwide
    organization promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian
    issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.


    ###
    NR#2004-034



    Editor's Note: Attached is the text of the Assembly letter to Secretary of
    State Colin Powell.



    April 1, 2004


    The Honorable Colin L. Powell
    Department of State
    2201 C Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20520

    Dear Mr. Secretary:

    The Armenian Assembly of America (AAA) is greatly troubled by the references
    made to the Armenian Genocide of 1915-23 as "alleged" genocide or
    "allegations" of genocide in the report entitled: "Turkey: Country Reports
    on Human Rights Practices For the Year 2003," which was released by the
    Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor and submitted to Congress by
    the Department of State on February 25, 2004.

    Specifically, under Section 2(a), the report states:

    In June, authorities arrested and indicted teacher Hulya Akpinar for
    comments she made during a conference in Kilis Province on the alleged
    genocide of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire. Prosecutors also charged six
    other teachers for following Akpinar out of the conference. Akpinar was
    temporarily dismissed from duty following her arrest. A Kilis court
    acquitted Akpinar and the other six teachers in December [emphasis added].

    Furthermore, under Section 5: National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities, the report
    states:

    In April, the Education Ministry issued a circular urging all schools to
    have their fifth- and seventh-graders prepare a one-page essay arguing that
    allegations that the Ottomans committed genocide against Armenians are
    "baseless." The country's Armenian schools were included in the
    distribution. Leaders of the ethnic Armenian community criticized the
    measure, saying it put psychological pressure on Armenian students. The
    Ministry also asked schools to organize conferences on the issue, and
    police arrested seven teachers for comments made at one such conference (see
    Section 2.a.) [Emphasis added].

    As you can imply, in Section 2(a), the wording of the paragraph is
    unquestionably influenced by Turkish assuage clouding State Department
    reporting. The use of the word "alleged" in this paragraph could not have
    been "accurate and objective," and may have been a reference to how the
    Turkish government framed the issue and do not reflect U.S. policy.
    Moreover, in Section 5, by not putting the word "allegations" in quotations,
    you have given credence to Turkish claims, and thus again clouding the
    "accurate and objective" reporting of the Department of State.

    In response to the August 1982 Department of State Bulletin in which the
    State Department used the word "alleged" four times in references to the
    1915 Armenian Genocide, the September 1982 and April 1983 Department of
    State Bulletin, under the "Editor's Note," retracted those statements
    confirming that they "were not intended as statements of policy of the
    United States. Nor did they represent any change in U.S. policy."

    Both then-Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Lawrence S.
    Eagleburger, and then-Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs and Department
    Spokesman, John Hughes, "reemphasized" the "aberration" and reaffirmed to us
    that "[p]olicy statements which are a part of the public record remain there
    and speak for themselves."

    This April 24th will mark the 89th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide of
    1915, an incontestable historical fact, during which 1.5 million
    (three-fourths) of the Armenian people living in the Ottoman Empire were
    "exterminated" en masse and the few that remained (half a million) were
    uprooted from their homelands of more than 2,500 years and deported under
    extreme conditions into exile. The U.S. Archives is replete with Department
    of State documents describing the premeditated "race extermination" of the
    Armenian people in the Ottoman Empire in 1915-23. Moreover, there is the
    fact that the Armenian Genocide was soon thereafter confirmed by yet another
    branch of the U.S. Government, in Senate Resolution 359 dated May 13, 1920,
    in which it resoundingly stated: "the testimony adduced at the hearings
    conducted by the sub-committee of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
    have clearly established the truth of the reported massacres and other
    atrocities from which the Armenian people have suffered." Finally, on
    January 28, 1975, a Joint Resolution by the Senate and House of
    Representatives of the United States of America, H.J. Res. 148, designated
    April 24, 1975, as "National Day of Remembrance of Man's Inhumanity to Man."


    In fact, prior to 1982, the Department of State squarely acknowledged the
    Armenian Genocide and recommended that Turkey acknowledge the crimes against
    humanity. This position was again clouded by Turkish influence on
    Department of State employees who are in charge of preparing reports on the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Contemporaneously and more importantly, the International Center for
    Transnational Justice (ICTJ), which was asked to determine the applicability
    of the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention to the Armenian Genocide,
    released a report finding that the 1915 mass slaughter of Armenians fits the
    legal definition of genocide. One of the key findings in the ICTJ report
    concluded that "the Events, viewed collectively, can thus be said to include
    all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the Convention,
    and legal scholars as well as historians, politicians, journalists and other
    people would be justified in continuing to so describe them."

    Finally, as part of the groundbreaking conference held in September 2000 by
    the Library of Congress and the Armenian National Institute in cooperation
    with the U.S. Holocaust Museum, the prestigious Cambridge University Press,
    early in 2004, released a vital new publication, entitled America and the
    Armenian Genocide of 1915, covering all facets of the leading American
    response to the Armenian Genocide, which encompassed the first international
    human rights movement in American history.

    On this upcoming solemn occasion, the Armenian Assembly urges you to
    re-clarify that the use of the words "alleged" and "allegations" in the
    above mentioned Department of State report do not "reflect an official
    position of the Department of State," and further urges you to displace
    error with truth: that the Armenian Genocide is not an "allegation" but is
    an irrefutable historical fact, unwavering to political vicissitudes.


    Sincerely,

    Anthony Barsamian
    Chairman,
    Board of Directors
    Armenian Assembly of America
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