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HH Aram I urges international action to prevent future genocide

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  • HH Aram I urges international action to prevent future genocide

    Associated Press Worldstream
    April 23, 2004 Friday 7:06 AM Eastern Time

    Armenian spiritual leader urges international action to prevent
    future genocide

    by JOSEPH PANOSSIAN; Associated Press Writer

    ANTELIAS, Lebanon


    Commemorating the early 20th century death of hundreds of thousands
    of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey, the spiritual leader of about 2
    million survivors and their descendants on Friday urged international
    action to prevent future genocide.

    Aram I, head of the Armenian Orthodox Church in the diaspora, said
    the world should impose economic sanctions, "and in extreme
    situations, engage in humanitarian intervention" to stop mass
    killings.

    "These are the most efficient ways of preventing genocide," he told a
    two-day conference organized by his church.

    Speaking at the opening session of the conference on Thursday, Aram I
    also announced the establishment of an International Center for
    Dialogue, Peace and Human Rights, to be based at his seat in the
    northern Beirut suburb of Antelias.

    The International Conference on Genocide, Impunity and Justice
    brought together Lebanese Cabinet ministers, lawmakers, religious
    leaders from other sects and foreign scholars and diplomats.

    Speakers focused on the inadequacy of existing international criminal
    laws in dealing with mass killings, which mostly go unpunished. The
    speakers included U.N. human rights and world court officials, as
    well as a presidential representative from Rwanda, where the world's
    latest genocide a decade ago killed nearly 800,000 people.

    Armenians say they lost 1.5 million people in 1915-23 as Ottoman
    Turkish authorities deported entire communities from various
    provinces. Turkey says the number of deaths was fewer, and that they
    resulted from civil unrest.

    Starting Friday, Armenians around the globe mark the anniversary of
    the start of the killings with marches, torch parades, sit-ins,
    lectures and vigils.

    But in Lebanon for the second consecutive year, such public
    manifestations by the vibrant Armenian community of nearly 100,000
    were canceled because of the conflict in Iraq and the Palestinian
    territories. Only a candlelit vigil will be held Friday at the seat
    of the Armenian Orthodox Catholicosate in Antelias.

    Armenians have been trying for decades to gain recognition of the
    mass killings in Turkey as the 20th century's first genocide. Turkey
    has repeatedly opposed the measure.

    Canada on Wednesday became the 16th country to label the killings as
    genocide when its parliament backed a resolution 153-68 condemning
    the actions of the Ottoman Turkish forces as a "crime against
    humanity." Turkey protested the Canadian vote.

    Switzerland, France, Argentina and Russia - as well as 11 U.S. state
    governments - have also called the killings genocide, and Armenians
    are lobbying for similar action from the U.S. government.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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